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THE WITENAGEMOT IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD THE CONFESSOR
THE WITENAGEMOT IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD THE CONFESSOR A Study in the Constitutional History of Eleventh-Century England BY
TR YGGVI
J.
OLESON
Published in co-operation with
THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA by UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS TORONTO • I 955
Copyright Canada 1955 UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS LONDON • GEOFFREY CUMBERLEGE
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN
Reprinted in 2018 ISBN 9978-1-4875-8181-7 (paper)
CONTENTS PREFACE
V
ABBREVIATIONS
IX
I THE REIGN OF EDwARD THE CONFESSOR
1
6
II OPINIONS OF SOME HISTORIANS ON THE WITENAGEMOT III OBSERVATIONS ON THE NATURE OF A WITENAGEMOT
17
IV DIRECT AND INDIRECT INFORMATION ON W1TENAGEMOTS IN THE
25
REIGN OF THE CONFESSOR V
35
INFORMATION ON WITENAGEMOTS IN ANGLO-SAXON DIPLOMAS
48
VI THE PERSONNEL OF THE WITENAGEMOT
61
VII THE NATIONAL AssEMBLY
70
VIII TIME AND PLACE OF MEETINGS OF THE KING AND WITAN
75
IX THE WITAN AS COUNSELLORS AND LEGISLATORS X
82
THE WITAN AND THE ELECTION AND DEPosmoN OF KINGS
91
XI THE WITAN AND VARIOUS ECCLESIASTICAL AND CIVIL BUSINESS XII THE WITAN AND JUDICIAL MATIER$ XIII CONCLUSION
IOI 110
APPENDIXES
A Opinions of some historians on the functions of the witan
I
B List of witnesses signing royal and private charters
1 17
C Number and classification of witnesses on the charters
135
D List of archbishops attesting charters
138
E List of bishops attesting charters
I 39
F List of abbots attesting charters
140
G Abbeys whose abbots attest charters
142
H List of earls attesting charters
143
I
1 44
List of lower clergy attesting charters
14
Contents
viii
J
List of thegns attesting charters
I 45
K Thegns who were or may have been sheriffs
148
L Scandinavian names on the charters
149
M The authenticity of the charters
1 50
N Suggested provenance of the genuine charters
157
0 Occasions on which the Confessor consulted or may have consulted his witan
1 58
P Classes of witnesses on royal charters
1 62
Q Classes of witnesses on private charters
165
R The Anglo-Saxon church
167
S
Military matters
T Itinerary of Edward the Confessor
168 I 70
72
BIBLIOGRAPHY
I
INDEX
181
PREFACE Tms monograph was begun as a doctoral dissertation under the patient guidance of Professor Bertie Wilkinson at the University of Toronto. It has been very considerably altered in many details but the main conclusions of the original remain. Dr. Wilkinson's influence will be apparent throughout to anyone familiar with his work, although in some matters we do not see eye to eye. His encouragement has been at all times of the utmost help to me. I am also greatly indebted to Dr. F. E. Harmer of the University of Manchester who read my original dissertation and parts of the revised work. For her many and invaluable suggestions I am most grateful. To the Canadian Social Science Research Council I am in debt for both a pre-doctoral fellowship and a grant-in-aid toward publication of this book. The University of Manitoba aided me in many ways. It has made both a grant-in-aid toward publication and other grants during the course of the preparation of the revised version of this work. The librarian of the university, Miss Elizabeth Dafoe, and the library staff have shown the utmost courtesy and goodwill in response to my unending demands on their time and energies. The Editorial Office of the University of Toronto Press, in particular Miss M. Jean Houston, merit my thanks for gracious and valuable contributions.
ABBREVIATIONS (a) Abbreviations of Some Works Cited The figure in brackets indicates the number of the work in the bibliography.
AfU: Archiu for Urkundmforschung AHR: American Historical Review ASC: Anglo-Saxon Charters (ed. Robertson) [51) ASChr: Anglo-Saxon Chronule (ed. Thorpe) [4] ASEng: F. M. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England [202] ASW: Anglo-Saxon Wills (ed. Whitelock) [52] BJRL: Bulletin of the John Rylands Library BKN: W. G. Searle, Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings and Nobles [194) CD: Codex diplomaticus aevi Saxonici (ed. Kemble) [56] CH: W. Stubbs, The Constitutional History of England [215) CHJ: Cambridge Historical Journal CHMed: J. E. A. Jolliffe, The Constitutional History of Medieval England [140] CHur6: W. A. Morris, The Constitutional History of England to r:u6 [167) Chron Abingdon: Chronuon Monasterii de Abingdon [9] Chron Evesham: Chronicon abbati£ de Evesham [ 7] Chron Rameseiensis: Chronicon abbatitz Rameseiensis [8] CrawCol: The Crawford Collection of Early Charters and Documents (ed. Napier and Stevenson) [57) CS: Cartularium Saxonicum (ed. Birch) [55) DB: Domesday Book (ed. Farley and Ellis) [6o] DEPN: E. Ekwall, Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names [1o8] EHR: English Historual Review Encomium: Encomium Emmae reginae (ed. Campbell) [ 11] FAG: Facsimiles of Ancient Charters in the British Museum [61) FASM: Facsimiles of Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts (ed. Sanders) [62) FlWig: Florentii Wigomiensis monachi chronicon ex chronuis (ed. Thorpe) [15] GP: Willelmi Malmesbiriensis de gestis pontificum Anglorum libri quinque (ed. Hamilton) [41) GR: Willelmi Malmesbiriensis monachi de gestis regum Anglorum libri quinque (ed. Stubbs) [42) HLC: A Hand-Book to the Land-Charters and Other Saxonic Documents (ed. Earle) [64) iF: lslen;:kfomrit [23) LD: The Lincolnshire Domesday and the Lindsey Survey (ed. Foster and Longley) [66) MGH: Monumenta Germaniae Historica MHB: Monumenta Historica Britannica NA: F. Liebermann, The National Assembly in the Anglo-Saxon Period [156) NC: E. A. Freeman, The History of the Norman Conquest of England [114)
Abbreviations
X
Peter Chron: The Chronide of Hugh Candidus (ed. Mellows) [22] PL: Patrologia Latina P.NDB: 0 . von Feilitzen, The Pre-Conquest Personal .Names of Domesday Book [112) RAS: W. Stubbs, Registrum sacrum Anglicanum [215) RB: Revue Benidictine RS: Rolls Sems (The Chronicles and Memorials of Great Britain and Ireland) TCPB: Two Chartularies of the Priory of St. Peter at Bath (ed. Hunt) [72] TRHS: Transactions of the Royal Historical Society (4th series) TSCP: Two of the Saxon Chronicles Parallel (ed. Earle and Plummer) [36) VCH: The Victoria History of the Counties of England [225) Vita Wuifstani: The Vita Wulfstani of William of Malmesbury (ed. Darlington) [40) Writs: Anglo-Saxon Writs (ed. Harmer) [53)
(b) Other Abbreviations Bd Bedfordshire Bk Buckinghamshire Br Berkshire C Cambridgeshire Ch Cheshire Co Cornwall, Cornish D Devonshire Db Derbyshire Do Dorset E Essex EA East Anglia GI Gloucestershire Ha Hampshire
He Ht Hu K
L La Lei Mx Nb Nf Nt Nth
Herefordshire Hertfordshire Huntingdonshire Kent Lincolnshire Lancashire Leicestershire Middlesex Northumberland Norfolk Nottinghamshire Northamptonshire
0 Olcel Sa Sf So Sr St Sx
w
Wa Wo y
Oxfordshire Old Icelandic Shropshire Suffolk Somerset Surrey Staffordshire Sussex Wiltshire Warwickshire Worcestershire Yorkshire
CHAPTER ONE
The Reign of Edward the Confessor FEW problems in English constitutional history have had less serious attention paid to them than has that of the Anglo-Saxon witenagemot. Apart from Liebermann's study of the witenagemot during the whole of the Anglo-Saxon period, and Purlitz's of the relations of king and witan, all recent discussions of the assembly appear as parts of larger works. On the whole it may be said that the witenagemot is generally regarded as the successor of the tribal assemblies of the ancient Germans and/or as the direct or indirect ancestor of the English parliament. No attempt has been made, in the past, to study the composition and function of the assembly at a given moment. It seems worth while to make such an attempt, although, admittedly, the character of the witenagemot may not have been the same throughout the entire Anglo-Saxon period. This study will in the main be confined to the reign of Edward the Confessor, both because materials for such a study exist in some abundance and because the reign is in many ways a period of transition. An attempt will be made especially to determine the personnel of the witenagemot, how far it was a representative assembly and how far it is correct to call it national. It is also hoped that some light will be thrown on the question of the extent to which the witenagemot is to be considered one of the "lineal ancestors of the British Parliament." 1 In Professor Wilkinson's penetrating analysis of the Northumbrian revolt of 1065 the following statement occurs: "The treaty of Olney shows that, only fifty years before the Conquest, ancient ideas of dividing England into two could be revived, under terrible stress. But those fifty years had been years of rapid change, in which national unity had become much more secure. The danger now was that of the ambition of the Earls acting within the framework of the national state." 2 The italicized words supply a key to an understanding of the reign of Edward the Confessor. One might even qualify them and substitute for "Earls" the words "family of Godwin." The ambitions of this house, which stopped at nothing, explain the turbulence of much of the Confessor's reign and the failure of the AngloSaxon monarchy to maintain itself against foreign powers. Again, although 1 NA, § 1; cf. § 71. All references to this work are to the sections (designated §) into which it is divided. • B. Wilkinson, "Northumbrian Separatism," p. 505. Italics mine.
B 4133
B
2
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Corifessor
paradoxical, it may be true that the ambitions of Godwin and his sons enabled the best in the administrative structure of the Anglo-Saxon state to survive the Conquest. It is interesting to speculate how the Conqueror would have acted had he triumphed over Harold, not as over one who had "usurped" the Crown of England, but as over the champion of the last of the line of Cerdic, the young N.theling Edgar. It is indeed true that by the time of the Confessor "national unity had become much more secure." 1 All the inhabitants of England, or at least the overwhelming majority of them, felt it right and natural that they should have a common king. Racial antagonism between Dane and Anglo-Saxon may be said to have been a thing of the past. 2 This is best shown by the Northumbrian revolt of 1065. Never does it seem to have entered the minds of the Northumbrians to renounce their allegiance to Edward or to set up a separate kingdom. 3 An efficient administrative system, as far as justice and local government are concerned, had been worked out and was to survive the Conquest. The royal writs, used so extensively by the Confessor, made for an extension ofroyal power. It is true that the system allowed great local diversity in many fields, but this is not to be regarded as a sign of weakness. The principle of co-operation between monarch and folk was firmly maintained. 4 The great, if not sole, weakness of the Anglo-Saxon state in the middle of the eleventh century lay in the possibility which the earldoms offered to men greedy for power. In the family of Godwin were men ready and eager to avail themselves of this. Even the panegyrist of the family, E. A. 1 Cf. ASEng, p. 537: " ... the ideal of political unity was accepted in every part of pre-Conquest England .•.. " 2 It is true that in the early years of Edward's reign there was some danger that certain influential people would support either Magnus Olafsson or Sveinn Ulfsson (Estrithson) in claiming the English throne. But it seems that any attempt on the part of these monarchs would have received little support even in the Danelaw. Cnut's widow, the mother of Edward, appears to have been the most prominent of those favouring a Scandinavian succession ( TSCP, II, 222-3). Among others oflike mind may have been Osbeorn, brother of king Sveinn (NC, II, 41); Osgod Clapa (ASChr, C 1046; FlWig, 1046); Gunnhild, the niece ofCnut (ASChr, D 1045; FlWig, 1044). Godwin no doubt was prepared to support the man he thought he could most easily control. On the whole matter see NC, II, 38--41 ; ASEng, pp. 420-1. 3 On this see especially Wilkinson, "Northumbrian Separatism." F. M. Stenton (ASEng, p. 582) rightly emphasizes that it was not a desire to make themselves independent of Harold, but the defeat at Fulford, that accounts for the failure of Edwin and Morcar to support Harold at Hastings. Cf. in this connection also F. M. Stenton, "The Scandinavian Colonies in England and Normandy," p. 11. 4 Cf. F. M. Stenton, "English Families and the Norman Conquest," pp. 11-12: "One of the cardinal features of English medieval history is the extent to which men of all ranks above serfdom in normal times co-operated with the crown in the work of government. To this co-operation the English administrative system in the middle ages owed the solidarity which enabled it to survive the recurrent shocks of rebellion and foreign war." ·
The Reign of Edward the Confessor
3 Freeman, cannot hide their ambition by the patriotic motives which he ascribed to all their acts. 1 It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the ambitions of the house of Godwin were the greatest disruptive forces in the last years of the AngloSaxon state. 2 None of the other earls seems to have aspired to rule more than his own earldom or a portion of the kingdom. Godwin and Harold must control the king. Upon the death of Edward, Harold seized the Crown with unseemly haste. Throughout their lives the father and his sons fought against everything which might limit their power. They supported Edward at first and forced him to marry Godwin's daughter. They attempted to break any other earl who might be an obstacle to their ambition. 3 They acquired earldom after earldom for the family. 4 They may have been responsible for the dismissal of the permanent navy. They ran foul of the standing army composed of the huscarles. They opposed reform in the church,5 seized its lands, 6 and thrust their favourites into church offices. 7 They fought desperately against the king's Norman friends and finally expelled them after a crisis that brought the country to the verge of civil war. From 1052 until the end of the reign of Edward the govern. ment was dominated by Harold, and the king apparently resigned himself to a secondary position. 8 Some time after that date Harold began to aim at the Crown, although he may at first have been satisfied to remain the power behind the throne. His share in the return of the A!:theling Edward is obscure. This may have been his work, but on the other hand he may have worked to prevent the retheling's succession. 9 However that may be, 1 Cf. for example NC, II, 21: "Again, it is hardly possible to acquit Godwine of being, like most fathers who have the chance, too anxious for the advancement of his own family." • Cf. ASEng, pp.41eah wres to cynge gesworon 7 he wunode J:>a swa on his broc:!or hirede pa hwile J:>e he leofode." 1 This, of course, does not rule out the participation of the witan in these arrangements. In fact, it almost goes without saying that they had a share in this matter, although a part of them seem to have been reluctant to recognize Edward, preferring, it would seem, a Scandinavian king, and scheming to deprive Edward of the Crown after his brother's death. 2 Any election, then, is out of the question, except in so far as it is implicit in the acceptance of Edward by the magnates and possibly in attempts to obtain recognition of him from recalcitrant magnates. 3 If this interpretation be right, the words, "7 call folc geceas J:>a Eadward 7 underfengon hine to kyninge," can only mean that allegiance was sworn to Edward and he was acknowledged king. 4 This would then be one further example of the vagueness of the terminology of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. Another matter in the reign of Edward the Confessor throws further light on the problem. This is the question of who was to succeed Edward. The very fact that this question loomed so large in the minds of conthrone, in very many instances. It may be pointed out here that in the Scandinavian kingdoms the will of the reigning monarch would seem to have often been the decisive factor in determining the succession. An example of the importance of his wishes in this matter is the great weight attached to the wish ofMagnusgcioi with regard to his successor (Flateyjarbok, Ill, 329-31; cf. also pp. 285-7) . 1 ASChr, D 1041. Version C uses almost the same words. I am well aware that Freeman vigorously opposed any such interpretation as that set out above. Actually, however, the very fact that Edward was invited to England by Hardecnut disposes of any argument that Edward was not marked out as the next king of the Anglo-Saxons. Alistair Campbell thinks that Edward was "The acknowledged heir to an ailing monarch, who knew his days were numbered" (Encomium, p . lxviii). CD, 762 (possibly spurious), a charter of Hardecnut, is witnessed by Edward (praedicti regisfrater verus) . 2 Edward's mother would seem to have been one of these (see below, chap. xn) . William of Malmesbury says that Eadsige and Godwin helped Edward to secure the throne to the irritation of the Danes (GP, p . 34). 3 Only in this sense can I understand the statement of Florence of Worcester, 1042, that Edward was proclaimed king chiefly through the exertions of Earl Godwin and Bishop Lyfing. 4 ASChr, D 1042. The ASChr, C 1042, omits all reference to an election and simply says : "7 call folc underfeng l'la Eadward to cinge." Versions C and D both add in almost the same words: "swa him gecynde wa:s" (C 1042). Professor Stenton is of the opinion that Edward returned to England in 1041 on the invitation of Hardecnut who, "almost certainly, put him forward as his heir." He also rejects the view that Godwin was the chief agent in Edward's restoration (ASEng, p. 417).
The Witan and the Election and Deposition of Kings
87
temporaries of the Confessor suggests that such matters were not normally left to be settled at the death of a king but were already arranged during his lifetime. 1 Even if one could not rely on the evidence for a bequest to William by the king and witan, the fact that the JEtheling Edward was sent for all the way to Hungary would still destroy such an argument as the one that maintains that "an act of the King and his Witan in William's favour is impossible in itself and is confirmed by no kind of evidence." 2 I have elsewhere discussed the problem of both the promise to William and the return of the JEtheling Edward, 3 and it is unnecessary to say more here than that I believe that Edward and his witan did in 1051 promise the throne to William,4 but that later, with the ascendancy of Earl Harold, an attempt was made to get the king to abrogate this by designating his kinsman Edward as his successor. To deny the witan competence in the former instance and allow it in the latter, as Freeman does, 5 is hardly possible. The witan had a share in both, but the will of the reigning monarch was probably the great, if not decisive, influence. 6 It remains to say a few words about the events of the year 1066, as far as these relate to the disposal of the Crown. In the series of elections which Liebermann cites as sufficient to raise the practice of election beyond any doubt, he includes three examples from this year. 7 These are the elections of Harold, Edgar, and William. In the first case we have an instance of what can hardly be called an election, but is probably very typical of what the Anglo-Saxons understood by an election. The witan, who had gathered for the consecration of the abbey, were, after the death of Edward, confronted with a claim to the throne, on the part of Harold, which was based on some such arguments as his fitness for the position, 1 I am not suggesting that such matters were arranged without consultation of the witan, whom I regard as having a share in all important business, but I am arguing against the view that the witan functioned as a sort of electoral college on the death of a king, and that they in this respect "towered above the crown" (.NA,§ 49). 2 .NC, III, 460. At the same time it strengthens the case for the designation of Edward as his heir by Hardecnut, for the two cases are very similar. 3 In a forthcoming article. 4 Cf. ASEng, p. 558: "It is in every way probable that the duke came in order to receive a recognition of his standing as successor designate to the crown." In a recent article ("Edward the Confessor, Duke William of Normandy, and the English Succession," pp. 526--45) Professor David Douglas has suggested that the statement of Chronicle D (1051), that William visited England, is an interpolation. He does, however, believe that Edward promised the throne to William. 5 Cf. .NC, III, 460, and II, 246. The weakness of Freeman's argument lies in his differentiation between what he calls the counsellors of Edward and the witan of England (.NC, II, 197-200). They are one and the same. 6 Even in the case of the lEtheling Edward, in which, I think, Harold may have imposed his will on the king, the Confessor does not seem to have yielded completely, if I am right in thinking that he refused to grant, or postponed granting, an audience to Edward. 7 .NA,§ 49.
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
the lack of any other suitable candidates, and a real or alleged death-bed bequest to Harold by Edward. The witan were thus faced with a situation which left them hardly another alternative than that of acknowledging Harold as king. Nor is there much reason to believe that they did not all submit to him. 1 Consent was thus given, but an election, in any real sense of that word, was hardly made, and indeed parts of the country seem to have refused to submit to Harold, for he had to make a special visit to Northumbria to secure the allegiance of its magnates with the possible exception of Morcar, who may have become his man in London. This consent he finally, although with difficulty, obtained largely through the able assistance of Wulfstan. 2 The incident should serve as a warning against placing too much reliance in such conventional expressions as "a totius Anglire primatibus ad regale culmen electus." 3 Of course, if the designation subregulus, which Florence of Worcester employs to describe Harold, be taken to mean that the earl was the formally recognized successor designate of Edward, the election becomes that much more unreal. It is, however, probable that no technical meaning is to be attached to the term, and that Florence used it simply because Harold's power and prestige in the last year or two of the reign were such that he was practically a viceregent. After the death of Harold the witan were faced with the choice of finding another native or of submitting to William. They chose to make the £theling Edgar king. Their action here approximates much more to a genuine election than in the case of Harold, for Edgar was not in a position to push his claims if he were not voluntarily elected. However, there seems to be little doubt that the election was the work of a few witan, 4 1 An entirely erroneous impression of unanimity and of what the choice really meant is given by such a statement as the following: "The assembled people of England, in the exercise of their ancient and undoubted right, chose with one voice Harold the son of Godwine" (NC, III, 14). In another passage Freeman states that the Northumbrians had not been well represented at the gemot which elected Harold. At the same time he reveals very well his conception of what a witenagemot was, when he says that if the votes had been taken, not by heads, but by tribes, cities, or cantons, the Northumbrians, although present only in few numbers, would have had an equal voice in the national councils, "though the West-Saxons present might have been counted by hundreds or thousands" (NC, III, 37-38). Cf. J. H. Round, Geoffrey de Mandeville, pp. 437-8. • Vita Wulfstani, pp. 22-23. 3 FlWig, 1066. Similarly the ASChr, C, D 1042, E, F 1041, is employing conventional language when it says that eall Joie chose Edward. 4 The best account of Edgar's election is in ASChr, D 1066, where it is stated that it was the work of Ealdred, archbishop of York, and the garrison (burhwaru) of London. Edwin and Morcar are said to have promised to fight witli Edgar, but whether they were present at the election is uncertain, although asserted by Florence of Worcester (1066). There is nothing to suggest that the election was the work of a fairly representative gemot, as Freeman thinks (NC, III, 351-4). Cf. Wilkinson, "Northumbrian Separatism," pp. 521-3.
The Witan and the Election and Deposition of Kings
89
acting at a time of crisis and under extraordinary circumstances. It is, thus, although an example of genuine election and of the right of the people to choose its rulers, hardly typical of normal procedure. The third so-called election of I 066 can only by courtesy be given that name. William can by no stretch of the imagination be said to have been chosen or elected king, unless by those terms be meant the act of submitting to the overlordship of an individual. The chronicler recognizes this when he writes: "And then came to meet him archbishop Ealdred, and Eadgar child, and earl Eadwine, and earl Morkere, and all the best men of London, and then from necessity submitted [bugon] when the greatest harm had been done." 1 The reign of the Confessor thus hardly supplies evidence that the witan formed a genuine electoral college, that they "towered above the king," or that the Anglo-Saxon monarchy was an elective one. On the other hand, as might be expected, it testifies that the title of king rested not solely on hereditary right, or the right to kingship which membership in the royal family implied, 2 but also on acceptance by the community (represented in England by the magnates or witan surrounding the king) of the claimant to the throne. He was, however, it seems, very often already marked out for the succession to the throne in the lifetime of his predecessor and only rarely elected by the witan, whose share in the election or creation of kings has probably been greatly exaggerated. On the function of the witan in the deposition of kings the reign of the Confessor reveals little. Edgar can hardly be said to have been deposed, but rather to have voluntarily abdicated, if he was ever considered full king. An act analogous to the deposition of a king might be discerned in the expulsion of Earl Tostig by the Northumbrians. However, in a society where there exists no machinery to compel the peaceful abdication of a ruler whom the people wish to be rid of, it is almost impossible to establish a distinction between a legal deposition and a violent one. It is a fundamental principle of the Middle Ages that a king who breaks the law is no longer entitled to obedience or fealty. Any subject who feels himself unlawfully treated by the king is quite within his rights, not only in refusing obedience, but in resorting to force to gain his rights. For him the king is no king but a tyrant. Similarly, of course, a people is justified in expelling a ruler who does not observe the law. But in the final analysis a legal deposition is a rebellion against a ruler which is crowned with success. Thus the act of deposition does not consist in a formal vote of the witan 1
ASChr, D 1066.
That this was very strongly felt is shown by examples cited above, to which may be added the reference to the £theling Edgar, whom men wished to have as their king "eallswa him wel gecynde wa:s" (ASChr, D I066). 2
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
expelling the ruler, but in the successful execution of an act of renunciation, made by individuals acting as individuals banded together for the moment, but in no sense forming, or acting as, a corporate body. There is thus little point in saying that .the witan possessed the right to depose the king, for this was a right which every individual possessed, i.e., the right of renouncing an unjust ruler. Nay, it was more than a right; it was the duty of every individual. 1 It is a different matter, that in practice the witan would take the lead in renouncing a king. That was a matter of expediency, for only if a magnate felt himself powerful enough to oppose the king would it be practicable to renounce his allegiance. The Northumbrian crisis is a good example of what in practice deposition meant, and it illustrates well how impossible it is to distinguish, as Liebermann attempted to do, between "a legal act by the constitutional organ of the commonwealth" and "a sum of treacherous deeds of violence committed by individual nobles." 2 Such a distinction is meaningless in a society which recognizes both the right of resistance and the ·right of "self-help." As Kem points out, "success alone in the end determined whether a revolt was wicked or glorious." 3 1 Cf. Kern, Kingship and Law, p. 87: "The fundamental idea is rather that ruler and ruled alike are bound to the law; the fealty of both parties is in reality fealty to the law; the law is the point where the duties of both of them intersect." Essentially I agree with Kern's ideas on deposition (pp. 85--97) . 2 NA,§ 50. It might be asked what steps the Northumbrians should have taken, had they wished to use, not violence as they did, but the recognized constitutional machinery of the day. 3 Kingship and Law, pp. go-g1. The lenient treatment of defeated rebels, of which so many examples are found in the Middle Ages, is explained by the universal recognition of the right of resistance on the part of an individual who believed his rights to have been flouted. He was entitled to resort to "self-help."
CHAPTER ELEVEN
The Witan and Various Ecclesiastical and Civil Business seems to have been no fixed method of appointing prelates to vacant sees in the reign of Edward the Confessor. No doubt Edward consulted at least his most trusted advisers among the ecclesiastical witan before appointing a prelate, but his wishes were probably the determining factor in most cases. It is unlikely that the lay witan, with the possible exception of the earl within whose earldom the see or monastery lay, 1 were generally consulted. The statements made by the chroniclers are often vague as to the method of appointment. In the vast majority of cases they content themselves with saying either that so and so "succeeded" to a bishopric, or that the king gave the bishopric or monastery to an individual. In either case one is probably safe in assuming that the king bestowed the office after consulting a few witan. Exceptionally an appointment seems to have been made in a large witenagemot, but there does not appear to have been any rule as to when or why this was done. 2 Whenever we are given any details as to an ecclesiastical appointment, it is invariably the will of the king that is the decisive factor. Thus in 1044 when Siward was made coadjutor archbishop of Canterbury, the matter was arranged between Archbishop Eadsige, Earl Godwin, and the king. 3 When the monks at Canterbury elected .IElfric to succeed Archbishop Eadsige, the king set aside their candidate and caused Robert to be appointed in a witenagemot at London. 4 When Manni wished to make .IEthelwig his successor at Evesham, he asked the king to appoint him. 5 In the case of Wulfstan, even if we accept the story of a canonical election by the clergy and people of Worcester, it is still the king who grants them the right to hold a canonical election. 6 When Bury St. Edmunds became THERE
1 Such an inference may be drawn from Symeon of Durham when he writes: "Auxilio et favore comitis Tostii, qui Siwardo successerat, Egilwinus in episcopatum sublimatur" (Opera omnia, I, 92). • Examples are the appointment of Manni in 1044 (Fl Wig, 1044); of Robert and Spearhafoc in 1051 (ASChr, C 1050) ; and possibly the appointments of Stigand in 1052 (ASChr, E 1052) and Wulfstan in 1062 (Vita Wulfstani, pp. 17-18). 3 ASChr, C 1044, E 1043. 4 Vita JEduuardi, pp. 39g-400; ASChr, C 1050. 5 Chron. Evesham, p. 88. 6 Fl Wig, 1062. I find it somewhat difficult to reconcile Florence's account of a canonical election with the emphasis the Vita Wuifstani places on the election or approval by the king
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
vacant in 1065, "cogitat ... rex .•• quern ... in locum subroget," and having decided on Baldwin summoned the prior and community to Windsor, where they then elected Baldwin.1 Another proof of the importance of the king is seen in the number of royal chaplains who were elevated to high positions in the church under Edward the Confessor. 2 All this points to the conclusion that on the whole the witan did not have a great part in the appointment of prelates. The king himself and possibly the high spiritual witan with an earl or two seem to have normally attended to this business. 3 Deposition of bishops and abbots was also within the power of the king. It may be that the witan here played a more important role than in appointments. Thus the deposition of Stigand in 10434 was probably counselled by the earls and whatever other witan advised the despoiling of the king's mother. Nothing is known of the share of the witan in the refusal of the authorities to ordain Spearhafoc, but Archbishop Robert and Bishop Ulf seem to have been outlawed in the great gemot of rn52. 5 All these instances, however, are more of a political than of an ecclesiastical nature, as none of these men, not even, it seems, Spearhafoc, was rejected on the grounds that he was unfit for spiritual office. The pope is said to have forbidden the ordination of Spearhafoc, but for what reason is not known. The others were presumably expelled because they "counselled evil counsel." There is, in the reign of Edward the Confessor, no example of an ecclesiastic being deprived of his office for spiritual reasons, by the king and witan, unless it be that ofSpearhafoc, and in his case the removal was probably the work of Robert acting with the permission of the king. It should be noticed that the expulsion of Archbishop Robert was deemed illegal by the papal curia and Stigand's appointment pronounced null and void. But it is significant that Stigand's partisans were so strong that he kept his office until the reform of the English church by Lanfranc and and witan: "Ad curiam reversi, dum Wigornensis episcopi ventilaretur electio, nomen ejus tulerunt in medium" (Vita Wuijstani, p. 18). In either case, however, the will of the king is of primary importance. • Ungedruckte Anglo-Normannische Geschichtsquellen, p. 245. 2 On these see Knowles, The Monastic Order, p. 71; Larson, King's Household, pp. 140-2; Regesta, pp. xii-xv. 3 Attention may be called here to the provisions of the Regularis Concordia on the election of abbots: "Abbatum ... electio cum Regis consensu et consilio, sanctae regulae ageretur documento" (quoted in Knowles, The Monastic Order, p. 396). Even here the role of the king is very important, and the interference of the witan would seem to be largely excluded. I may add here that I do not regard writs announcing the bestowal ofa bishopric as necessarily excluding action on the part of the witan, but I do think that the language is another indication of the primary importance of the king in this matter, e.g., "ich kylle eow llat ich habbe geunnen Gisan minan preste lies biscopriche" (CD, 835). 4 ASChr, C 1043. 5 ASChr, E 1048, 1052.
The Witan and Various Ecclesiastical and Civil Business
93
William. 1 However, his retention of office is hardly to be ascribed to the witan but to Godwin and Harold. The share of the witan in the regulation of other aspects of the life of the church does not stand out clearly in the sources for the reign of the Confessor. Yet there can be little doubt that at least the ecclesiastical witan played a major role in such matters. 2 The witan may have had some part in the fixing of the episcopal see at Exeter, although in the charter effecting this, the king makes the transfer known to "all the magnates of the Angles. " 3 Possibly their share in such business has, however, been exaggerated. From the account of the attempt of Hercman of Ramsbury to obtain Malmesbury, it appears that such a decision might be made by the king after consulting no more than a few advisers. We are indirectly told that the first that Harold heard of the matter was when the monks of Malmesbury approached him and requested his aid in preventing Hercman from securing their monastery. Through his influence with the king, Harold was able successfully to oppose Hereman's design. 4 Of the action of the witan in the union of the sees of Ramsbury and Sherborne in 1058, we are told nothing, nor do we know what hand they had in the dispatch of representatives to the synod at Rheims in 1049 or to that at Rome in 1050. 5 It is thus likely that the inner life of the church was largely regulated by the king and his closest ecclesiastical advisers. The lay witan may have, for the most part, interfered in church questions only when these particularly concerned them, and then only as individuals. They may also have played a considerable part in the framing of ecclesiastical laws, such as, for example, those of Cnut. In civil matters the share of the witan, both spiritual and lay, may have been considerably more than in ecclesiastical business. It is not unreasonable to assume that king and witan co-operated in the appointment of earls. However, the reign of Edward the Confessor does not afford many clear examples of such co-operation. 6 Action by the king and witan in 1 Papal influence in England, nevertheless, grew steadily throughout the reign of the Confessor. It is not correct to say, as F. E. Warren does, that "in the eleventh century we hear for the first time of bishops going to Rome for consecration or confirmation, and of the Roman court claiming at least a veto on the nomination of the English king" ( The Leofric Missal, p. xxiv), but certainly the number of instances of papal intervention would seem to have been far greater in the reign of the Confessor than in any other reign in the preceding two centuries. More prelates travelled to Rome and there were more channels for papal influence. See Darlington, "Ecclesiastical Reform," pp. 385-428. 2 See NA,§ 56; Bohmer, Kirclu und Staat, p. 50. 3 CD, 791. Cf. Pedler, Episcopate of Cornwall, pp. 81---S5. 4 GP, p. 182. Freeman, who held that such an important piece of business could only be settled by the national assembly, has difficulty in explaining how this could have been done. He never explains why Harold was ignorant of the matter, if it was discussed in 5 GP, pp. 180-1; ASChr, D 1051; E 1046. a full witenagemot (NC, II, 270). 6 Yet all Liebermann's examples are drawn from this reign (NA,§ 57).
94
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
the appointment of Odda and £lfgar to earldoms in 1051 is implied in the words of the Chronicle: "7 man sette J,a Oddan to eorle ofer Defenascire 7 ofer Sumersreton 7 ofer Dorseton 7 ofer Weales 7 mann sette £lfgar Leofrices sunu eorles ~ane eorldom on handa J,e Harold rer ahte." 1 All other references in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle to appointments of earls during the reign either mention the bare fact of succession or state that the king made the appointment. 2 Thus when Godwin died, Harold is simply said to have succeeded to his earldom and £lfgar to the one Harold had held. 3 One version of the Chronicle reports Tostig's appointment non-committally: "Tosti feng to J,an eorldome," but another version records: "se cyng geafJ,one eorldom Tostige." 4 The bare fact of £lfgar's succession to his father's earldom is all that the sources mention. 5 In 1065, when the Northumbrians deposed Tostig, they prayed that they might have Morcar for their earl, "7 se cyning ),res geu~re." 6 Not much is to be inferred from these references, but it seems clear that the king's action is of paramount importance, although there is little reason to believe that he did not consult some of his witan in most, or all, instances. 7 It might be concluded from the mention of the bare fact of succession in cases where son succeeds father, that the earldoms had become to some extent hereditary. Too much, however, should not be made of this. In fact, one may say that the language of the chroniclers, when describing the handling of these matters, is exactly what one might expect from members of a society whose modes of procedure were extremely fluid. ASChr, E 1048. Florence of Worcester adds nothing of importance. 3 ASChr, C, D, E 1053. 4 ASChr, D 1055, E 1055. It is to be noted that it is version E of the Chronicle which, according to Freeman, always emphasizes the popular nature of the government. 5 ASChr, D, E 1057. 6 ASChr, D, E 1065. Version C says only that the Northumbrians chose Morcar for their earl. 7 An instance of the co-operation of the witan in large numbers is the restoration of the earldoms to Godwin and Harold when they were in-lawed in 1052, but this is hardly an example of normal procedure (ASChr, C 1052). Purlitz (Konig und Witenagemot, pp. 5157) held that the king had the greatest share in the nomination of prelates and earls. He cites as examples of the king acting alone in these matters, in the reign of Edward the Confessor, the appointment of Siward to Canterbury, Hercman to Sherborne, Leofric to Crediton, Heca to Selsey, Ulf to Dorchester, Robert to Canterbury, and Spearhafoc to London (p. 53). He adds that he does not doubt that in the election of prelates "eine Mitwirkung der Witan bei derselben stattgefunden hat," but thinks it was only formal. The same procedure, he says, was followed in the appointment of ealdormen (p. 54), and he cites as examples of the king alone granting earldoms the appointment of Odda, and that of Blegent and Riwallo to Wales (p. 55). It is strange that Liebermann paid no attention to Purlitz, referring to him only once (NA,§ 3), where he says that he generally followed Kemble, treating independently only the election and deposition of kings. This is hardly true. 1
2
The Witan and Various Ecclesiastical and Civil Business
95
In practice, the power of the king and witan to levy taxes for the public services cannot be doubted, but there are reasons to doubt that this was regarded as quite just or legal. It must, too, be emphasized that the only true which is known to have been levied with some regularity by the king and witan was the heregeld. 1 There are also several references, in the Anglo-Saxon Chr,micle, to the levying of truces by the king and witan for the purpose of buying off the Danes. 2 Sometimes, however, the sources speak as if the king alone decreed the paying of tribute. 3 To mediaeval man taxation was simply a form of confiscation of property. Kern asserts: "The State therefore can accomplish this attack on private rights [i.e., trucation] only with the free consent of all concerned (or at least of their representatives)." 4 In a certain sense, of course, the witan were regarded as representatives of the community, but it is doubtful whether they were regarded as competent to speak for all in such an important matter as taxation. In time of war the people would possibly acquiesce in the levying of taxes for the sake of securing peace, but in time of peace the levying of such truces, it would appear, was felt to be an injustice. Indeed there is some reason to suspect that, even when they were levied with the sanction of the witan, they were still not regarded as having been levied by representatives competent to consent for the community. 5 There can, for example, be no doubt that the strange gyld imposed in 1041 was regarded as illegal by the inhabitants of Worcester. Yet apparently Hardecnut's witan agreed to it, for the king sent all his earls to punish the people for the slaying of his two huscarles who had been attempting to collect the tax. 6 In the reign of Edward the Confessor there is no mention of the witan The Mregeld seems to date from 1012-13 (ASChr, D 1052; cf. Writs, pp. 439-40). For example, ASChr, 991, 994, 1002, 1006, 1011, 1012. In 1004 it is the king and the East Anglian witan who decree the paying of tribute. 3 ASChr, 1014. It is not stated in the Chronicle who imposed the tribute in 1018, the pay for the standing army in 1040, nor again the tax of 1041 (ASChr, s.a.), but in the latter two cases Florence of Worcester (s.a.) says they were imposed by the king. Purlitz (Konig und Witenagemot, pp. 5g--61) doubts that the witan had much share in levying taxes. He says that the king himself lifted the Mregeld. But he admits that the king and witan acted together on occasion. • Kingship and 14w, p. 186. 5 This may even be saying too much. Kem correctly writes: "We have here learnt two things: ( 1) that the monarch could, for example, exact taxation only after he reached an understanding with the community, and (2) that this understanding, at least in theory, took the form of negotiation with every individual, as to whether he was willing to pay" (Ibid., p. 194). But it may be doubted whether this principle had become clearly established in eleventh-century England, where, except for the Mregeld in the last two generations of the Anglo-Saxon state, new taxation was such an unheard of thing, that it is hardly to be expected that any principle whereby new taxation could legally be imposed would have evolved. This explains why, as Miss M. V. Clarke noticed, the idea of consent does not appear to have been in any way associated with royal revenue in the Anglo-Saxon period (Mediaeval Representation and Consent, p. 250). 6 ASChr, C 1041; FlWig, 1041. 1
2
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
assenting to any taxes, although there is no doubt that Edward continued to collect the heregeld, or it would not have been necessary to abolish it in 1051. This abolition is said to have been performed by the king, and there is no mention of the witan acting in the matter. 1 The language used by the chroniclers, on this occasion, suggests that the tax was regarded as an unjust, and therefore illegal, one. 2 On the whole, I think, it may be said that it is doubtful if the Anglo-Saxons ever felt that the witan and the king-much less the witan alone-were competent to levy taxes on the nation. To employ modern terminology, it is questionable whether the witan and king ever had the constitutional right to impose new taxation. In a time of emergency, such as occurred during the reign of Ethelred, the community acquiesced in the levying of the heregeld. Since the war lasted such a long time, the tax, no doubt, acquired some status through age. No doubt, too, it continued to be unpopular. The very existence of this tax throughout almost forty years argues that Anglo-Saxon England had a government far less popular and far less representative than is often assumed, for, had it reflected the views of the majority of the community, there can be little doubt that a tax as unpopular as the heregeld would have been abolished long before it was. Again, had the witenagemot been a national assembly, whose members were regarded as representatives of the community rather than representatives of the king, the tax would either have been less unpopular or sooner abolished. Its very existence suggests that the Anglo-Saxon monarch was, in practice, though not in theory, more powerful than is commonly assumed. Indeed, it may well be that the Anglo-Saxon monarchy and society bore a much closer resemblance to early Merovingian monarchy and society than to those of either eleventh-century France or Scandinavia, both of which it no doubt resembled in many ways. The peculiarly personal relationship between king and magnate in England, under even a weak king, worked in favour of the monarchy, much more than did the contractual and more strictly defined relationship between king and vassal in France. Only the most powerful personalities could turn feudalism into a source of strength to the Crown. Again, in Scandinavia the existence of alsherjarping severely limited the exercise of power on the part of the king. In practice, an English king, if he took care not to offend the moral sense
1 ASChr, D 1052; FlWig, 1051. On what evidence Liebermann bases his statement that the abolition was "enacted with the consent of the witan," I do not know (NA,§ 59). 2 ASChr, D 1052: "That tax distressed all the English nation during so long a space as is here above written. That was always paid before other taxes, which were variously paid, and with which the people were variously distressed." Later works emphasize even more strongly the unjust nature of the tax, but may reflect the views of their authors' contemporaries and not those of the Anglo-Saxons (see Lives, ed. Luard, pp. 51-52, 205-6). The other taxes mentioned in the above quotation from the Chronicle I believe to have been customary dues of various kinds.
The Witan and Various Ecclesiastical and Civil Business
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of the community in too outrageous a fashion, and if he kept on good terms with the most powerful magnates, need hardly fear that his acts would be challenged. Much more, too, than the royal houses in most other countries, does the English royal house of Cerdic seem to have been regarded as pre-eminently "throne-worthy." I suspect that to a great extent the following statement of Chadwick may be as applicable to eleventh-century Anglo-Saxon society as to that of the Heroic Age: "Much has been written about the various powers possessed by the kings, but it is still by no means clear what they could not do, so long as they had a powerful and contented body of personal followers." 1 It is recorded that on several occasions the witan co-operated with the king in planning the defence of the realm against the Danes and others. 2 The reign of Edward the Confessor offers some examples of this, although at times the king alone is mentioned in connection with the calling out of military forces. The decision to dismiss the lithsmen in 1050 and 1051 would seem to have been taken after consultation with large numbers of witan. 3 Again, the dispatch of ships to Sandwich in 1052, and the appointment of earls Ralph and Odda to command them, were decreed by king and witan. 4 It is possible that minor decisions of a military nature were made by the king and a small number of witan, 5 and that all major decisions were made by the king and all the leading magnates. 6 This is indeed what one would expect in a society where military forces are raised for the occasion and are commanded by the great magnates whom the king has appointed over the various localities. Co-operation of king and magn.ite is indispensable under such an arrangement, and very likely to be closer in this matter than in any other. That the Danish conquest made any appreciable difference here cannot be shown, although the existence of a standing army and a permanent navy would make it unnecessary to call out the fyrd except when grave danger threatened. 7 But the importance of the earls and of the thegns who were witan would still be great, since they, no doubt, became closely connected with the standing army. Its command would likely fall to some of the household officers of the king. 8 In any case harmony between king and magnates ' Herou Age, p. 366. • See NA,§ 58. ASChr, E 1047, C 1049, I050. Larson has shown conclusively, I think, that only the naval forces, and not the standing army, were dismissed (King's Household, pp. 168--9). • ASChr, E 1052. 5 The king alone is mentioned as acting in ASChr, C 1045, 1049, and 1052. In the 3
latter part of the Confessor's reign Harold is spoken of as the most important agent
ASChr, C 1056, C, E 1o63).
Almost all the examples that Liebermann gives are of this nature (NA, § 58). See Appendix S. Kemble thought this might well have been the function of the stallers (Saxons, II, 122). The local levies seem often to have been led by the sheriffs (Morris, Sheri.ff, p. 27). BU" H 6
1 8
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Corifessor
was absolutely necessary if the Crown were to possess any real military strength. The crisis of 1051 is a good illustration of this. Godwin was outlawed in 1051 because the magnates were prepared to support the king. In 1052 Godwin had large forces and the magnates were unwilling to fight for the king, who, much against his will, had to yield. At all stages of the conflict king and magnates were in consultation. This, of course, is not to deny that the standing army may have considerably strengthened the royal power. The question of what share the witan had in the booking of land is a complicated one. It is not at all certain what is meant by the terms "book.land" and "folk.land". There is fairly general agreement that land held by book is land which has been freed from certain public burdens. 1 There is hardly as general agreement that folkland is land held under folk-right, land subject to rents and services for the maintenance of the king, and comprising all land from which these burdens have not been removed by action of the king and witan. 2 There would seem to be some reasons for thinking that this definition is too broad, and that folkland represents the ancient demesne of the Anglo-Saxon kings. 3 The subject, however, lies beyond the scope of this work, although the resolution of the problem would make it easier to assess the share of the witan in the booking ofland. It may be said, however, that in what follows I assume that to book land means to remove from it certain burdens, to give the grantee the right to dispose of it at will, and to give it "immunity from challenge in the common moots and a procedure of defence which must have been a most enviable privilege in the conditions of law which then prevailed. " 4 There is no doubt that king and witan co-operated in the making of landbooks. It is another matter how important the share of each was. The conventional phrases used to describe the action of the witan may mean all or nothing, 5 but it would probably not be far wrong to view the king as the most important agent and the witan as witnesses rather than active parties, at least in the reign of Edward the Confessor. 6 This seems to be 1 See ASEng, pp. 302-7; J.E. A. Jolliffe, "English Book-right," pp. 1-21; Turner, 2 Cf. ASEng, pp. 306-9. "Bookland and Folkland," pp. 357~6. 3 Turner, " Bookland and Folkland," advances what seem to be strong arguments for this view. I hope in the near future to discuss the whole question of what folkland was. • Jolliffe, "English Book-right," p. 13. 5 The formulae used in the Confessor charters are quoted note 2 , p . 48, above. Jolliffe warns us : "To try to define the purpose for which king and witan intervene in the granting of book-land, or assess their several shares in the transaction, would be an anachronism" ("English Book-right," p. 6). Again he writes : "King and witan, 'rex cum consilio sapientum,' are the enacting power: to say more would be to force an unreal definition upon a practical age" (ibid.). 6 Cf. Jolliffe, "English Book-right," p. 6: "Public enactment in its fullest sense, both as to the authority and the occasion, is what is sought, and the king may almost, though
The Witan and Various Ecclesiastical and Civil Business
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confirmed by the fact that, whenever private charters are witnessed by king and witan, they are said to have been made with the "cynges fullra leafe and on his gewitnesse." 1 Even where the witan do not seeni to witness, many private charters are said to have been made with the permission and consent of the king. 2 The number of landbooks which are extant from the Confessor's reign testifies that it was customary to book land in the presence of the witan. That is almost all that the present state of our knowledge of this matter allows us to say. It would be futile, and possibly meaningless, to ask whether the consent of the witan was necessary when the king wished to book land. Such a question has meaning only if by "witan" are meant a large number of magnates gathered in a formal assembly, in which, to be valid, the transaction must be confirmed. If on the other hand the term describes merely the few magnates who happen to be with the king and whom he consults more or less formally, the question of validation does not arise. The king, no doubt, alienated land in the presence of both formal and informal assemblies, and it is doubtful whether he ever made an important grant without consulting at least a few witan, although I would hesitate to say that he did not feel competent to do so. 3 All that can really be said is that there was a customary, but not a fixed and never quite, fulfil this requirement alone." Liebermann (NA, § 28) says that in the eleventh century the king and a court council disposed arbitrarily of Crown lands by means of the writ. This, as I have argued, establishes an unwarranted distinction between witan and court council, although it may be admitted that the announcement, by means of a writ, of a grant of land might be taken to mean that those to whom the writ is addressed had no share in the transaction announced in the instrument. But it is by no means certain that such an interpretation is correct. The writ tells us nothing as to how the action it announces was arrived at. Or is it to be seriously maintained that, because a writ states, "ich kyl'le eow l'lat ich habbe geunnen Gisan minan preste l'les biscopriche" (CD, 835), the king alone, without consulting any of his witan, made the appointment? Cf. V. H. Galbraith, "An Episcopal Land Grant of 1085," p. 556: 'For the sealed writ was in origin perhaps merely supplementary to the unaddressed diploma, whose provisions it notified in the form of a letter to the persons concerned. It ... referred 'to an act of which it formed no part,' and we may doubt if it was even meant to be preserved." I may say here that I do not know of a genuine writ announcing a grant of land whose bestowal has been made in an extant genuine charter. It may, however, be mentioned that there is a writ (CD, 828) announcing that Atsere has given Lessness (K) to Westminster, and that this gift by Atsere is recorded in the forged CD, 824. But Dr. Hanner has shown that the writ itself is almost certainly a fabrication ( Writs, pp. 29g--301). 1 CD, 956. 2 Examples of both types are by no means confined to the reign of Edward the Confessor, but characterize the whole Anglo-Saxon period. See CD, 923 (1051-2); ASC, XCIV (1042); CD, 745 (1032), 898 (ca. 1023), 683 (ca. 985, Earl lElfric also consents), 680,681,682 (all three ca. 977, and all with the permission of Earl lElfhere in addition to that of the king), 1347 (975-g). Numerous other examples might be given. 3 I think it likely that the advice and consent of the witan were felt to be desirable, not because the king was not competent to act without them, but to safeguard against a reversal of the grant by another monarch in the future.
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Co,ifessor
invariable, 1 procedure in these matters. It may also be added that unquestionably the king and witan heard suits involving bookland, but I know of nothing from the reign of Edward the Confessor to add to what J. E. A. Jolliffe has written on that subject. 2 1 Had it been fixed and invariable the number ofwitan attesting land charters might be expected to vary much less than it actually does. 2 "English Book-right," pp. 1-21.
CHAPTER TWELVE
The Witan and Judicial Matters No discussion of the functions of the witan would be complete without an examination of its role in judicial matters. Suits concerning bookland were dealt with by the king assisted by the witan 1 and no doubt formed the bulk of civil suits heard. There are none of these from the reign of the Confessor to claim our attention. In criminal matters, cases of treason seem to have been the most frequent. 2 Of the latter several examples occur in which sentence of outlawry was pronounced and in some of which, at least, the witan had a share. The reign of Edward the Confessor began, as is well known, with some dissatisfaction over his accession. It would seem that at least a part of the Danes in England would have preferred a Scandinavian king. Somewhat surprisingly Edward's mother seems to have been of this party. Her preference was, apparently, Magnus g61Ji of Norway 3 and her activities must have brought her under suspicion. No formal trial, i.e. a trial at which she was present and permitted to make her defence before king and witan, 4 seems to have taken place, but the language of the chroniclers implies that the king and witan came to the decision to take action against her. 5 Earls Godwin, Leofric, and Siward took part in the despoiling of Emma, and were no doubt the most prominent in counselling the action. Both the date of the action and the language of the chroniclers argue against the assumption that the proceedings took place in a specially summoned meeting of all the witan. Emma's lands and treasures were seized by the See Jolliffe, "English Book-right," pp. 1-21. Cf. NA,§ 61. Most of the examples Liebermann cites of the witan's exercise of jurisdiction in criminal matters are cases of treason (NA, § 61). I am unable to follow him when he distinguishes between the witenagemot and what he calls the "king's judicial court." He himself admits that both employed witan for doomsmen. I do not know in what the distinction between the two consisted, unless it be the number of witan employed. But for the eleventh century the number would be of no consequence. 3 On this see ASEng, pp. 420-2; NC, II, 38-41; TSCP, II, 222-3. 4 As will be seen from the account of the cases discussed below, the accused seems hardly ever to have been present, but to have been condemned in absentia. 5 Especially ASChr, D 1043: "man gerredde pan cynge.... " The ASChr, C 1043, and E, F 1042, simply say that tbe king despoiled his mother. Florence of Worcester (1043) says that the king moved suddenly, and names the earls who acted with him. The reason for the despoiling of Emma, given by the above authorities, is unsatisfactory. We learn the true reason from an entry in the Translatwn of St. Mildred (Hardy, ed., Descriptive Catalogue of Materials Relating to the History of Great Britain and Ireland, I, 380), where Emma is said to have urged King Magnus to seize England. Cf. however Encomium, p. xlix. 1
2
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
king, and the witan probably had some share in the seizure, although it would be going too far to say that they adjudged her property forfeit to the king after a formal trial. No details are known concerning the banishment in 1044 of Gunnhild, the niece of King Cnut, and her sons. 1 The same is true of Osgod Clapa's expulsion in 1046. 2 Both cases, however, were probably bound up with preference for the succession of a Scandinavian when Hardecnut died in 1042. On the outlawry of Swegen in 1049 we possess more details,3 but it is difficult to know exactly what happened. In 1046 Swegen made an expedition to Wales and on his return "ordered the abbess of Leominster to be fetched to him, and had her while it listed him, and then let her go home." Florence of Worcester says he wished to marry her. 4 In 1047 Swegen departed from England, 5 but whether voluntarily or as an outlaw is not known. 6 His affair with the nun was hardly cause for outlawry, and it is the only offence he is known to have committed.7 The emphasis laid on his promise at the time of his return to England to be faithful to Edward might suggest that his departure was occasioned by a too favourable attitude toward Sveinn Ulfsson of Denmark, although this is belied by the friendly relations between Sveinn and Edward. Or can it be that when the king and witan refused Sveinn's request for aid, Godwin sent Swegen with ships, thus incurring the displeasure of Edward? It may of course be, that it was disappointment at not being allowed to marry the abbess that caused him to leave England. 8 In any case he did leave, and this made it necessary to grant his earldom to someone. It was, accordingly, divided between earls Harold and Beorn. 9 Swegen remained abroad until 1049, when he returned at the time the king lay with his fleet at Sandwich. Whether outlawed or not, it was now necessary for Swegen to be reconciled with the king if he wished to regain his earldom. What steps he took to effect this cannot be known with certainty since the accounts in the sources vary. It seems certain, however, that Swegen obtained Beorn's aid in effecting a reconciliation with the ASChr, D 1045; FlWig, 1044. ASChr, C rn46, D 1047, E 1044; FlWig, 1046. 3 The various accounts are conveniently arranged in TSCP, II, 229-31. 5 ASChr, E, F 1045. • ASChr, C rn46; FlWig, 1049. 6 A judicious examination ofSwegen's case is to be found in Wilkinson, "Northumbrian Separatism," pp. 513-14. Professor Wilkinson doubts that Swegen was formally outlawed, but thinks that he was in 1049 seeking "a personal reconciliation with the king." 7 Cf. TSCP, II, 115. 8 Freeman (NC, II, 57) held that Swegen, in his disappointment at not being allowed to marry the abbess, "threw up his earldom, left his country. . .. " Professor Stenton (ASEng, p. 423) thinks that Swegen had by his act "offended all responsible opinion," and that he then "abandoned his earldom, apparently because he was not allowed to 9 ASChr, C 1049. marry her [the abbess]." 1
2
The Witan and Judicial Matters
103
king. The story of Beorn's attempt to assist in this matter is immaterial to our purpose, which is to determine the share of the witan in the whole episode. On one thing, no matter how they differ in detail, all the accounts agree. This is, that Swegen's plea for restoration was not dealt with in any formal assembly, but by the king and a few magnates. The will of the king seems to have been the deciding factor. 1 In one version of the Chronicle Swegen is said to have approached the king and secured restoration. 2 Harold and Beorn opposed this and evidently were able to persuade the king to reverse his decision and to order Swegen to leave the realm within five days. However, within two days Swegen won Beorn over to his side and persuaded him to intercede with the king.•Another version states that Swegen made his request for reconciliation to the king. 3 Again Harold and Beorn opposed this, but the latter, it seems, was won over by Swegen. The king, however, refused to pardon the suppliant, who then persuaded Beorn to make another attempt to obtain a favourable decision from the king. But while Beorn was on his way to the court, Swegen slew him. According to both versions it was the king and the interested parties who played the leading roles. Clearly it was the king who could grant or withhold whatever Swegen was asking for. 4 After Swegen slew Beorn "se cing pa 7 eall here cw.edon Swegen for nioing." 5 Who was acting here with the king? What was the here? Liebermann distinguished between the here and the witenagemot when he wrote: 1 Anyone familiar with the Icelandic sagas and those of the Norwegian kings cannot fail to be struck by the similarity between the attempt of Swegen to be reconciled with Edward and attempts of various individuals to obtain pardon at the hands of the Scandinavian kings for some act committed against the latter (Cf. IF, II, 17~5, 214-16; VIII, 15g--61; Heimskringla, pp. 288, 292-7, 356, 478--9; Fjiirut{u fslendinga-pzttir, ed. l>6rleifr J6nsson, Reykjavik, 1904, pp. 140--3, 15g--61, 517-23). It is to be remarked that, in spite of the great importance of national and provincial ping in the Scandinavian countries, especially Sweden, it is always the king who acts and decides, who punishes and pardons. Only on special occasions are matters of the gravest importance, such as war and peace, or the succession to the throne, dealt with at the Ping. In other words, the government is the king's, although he sometimes relies heavily on the counsel of one or more of his courtiers. How much the more would this be the case in a society such as the AngloSaxon which knew no national assemblies? Indeed the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle everywhere speaks as if the government were the king's (including, of course, the witan or courtiers who happened to be with him). Only on occasion does it mention the summoning of all the witan, i.e., numerous magnates who do not habitually attend on the king, for the purpose of treating some very grave matter. Cf. in this connection a discussion of what to do with an individual who attempted to assassinate King Olaf (Heimskringla, p. 247). Note the informality of the proceedings. 2 ASChr, E 1046. 3 ASChr, C 1049. • Professor Wilkinson takes essentially the same view ("Northumbrian Separatism," pp. 5 1 3- 1 4). 5 ASChr, C 1049.
104
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
"The here banishes Swen, but the witan confirm this outlawry." 1 He did not, however, exactly define the former. Freeman thought that the assembly which outlawed Swegen was a military gemot, although only of the standing army, and he had doubts as to the constitutionality of the act. 2 Larson regarded the here as the standing army of huscarles, the army which was founded or at least given definite organization by Sveinn or Cnut in England, and known as the pingmannalio. This explanation seems very reasonable. 3 Larson's view is strongly supported by Scandinavian sources which state that Beorn was slain in the pingmannalio in England. 4 Larson advanced strong arguments that the force was an organized guild with a code of laws, the same as, or similar to, the Leges Castrenses or Viorliig. 5 In thest it was provided that a member of the force who slew another member should stand trial before the huskarlastifna, 6 and if found guilty be driven off the king's estates with the name of n£oingr, and be exiled from every land under Cnut's rule. 7 There seems little doubt that Larson is correct in his contention that it was this body, the huskarlastifna of the pingmannalio, that, together with the king, declared Swegen n£oingr after the slaying of Beorn. It is not the witan but the standing army that decrees the exile of Swegen. 8 Nor is this strange, if indeed the pingmannalio was an organized body having its own code of laws. Beorn and Swegen had, very likely, been two of its commanders, and its competence to deal with Swegen was probably absolute, since he was no longer an earl, and was possibly even an outlaw. 1 NA, § 39. What his authority for the latter part of this statement is, I do not know. He cites only the ASChr, where I can find no support for his view. On the here see Appendix S. • NC, II, 67---{i8. Freeman assumed that the same assembly had previously rejected Swegen's application for restoration. Liebermann says (NA,§ 61): " .. • the king by himself could revoke outlawry"; and Steenstrup writes (Danelag, p. 256): ' ... kongen alene kunde tilbagekalde den, som var landflygtig efter Dom." 3 King's Household, pp. 152---{i9. 4 "En J,essi voru vpphauf vm ma! J,eirra Asmundar og Sueins konungs at Sueirn Gudnason hafde veget Biorn faudr bans j J,ingamanna lidi vestr aa Einglandi" (Flateyjarbok, III, 370). Larson erroneously translates mal as "conversation," but in this context it can only mean "relations/' "matters," "affairs," or "business." 5 See Scriptores rerum Danicarum, III, 13g---{i4. 6 A gathering probably similar to the Norwegian hirostefna (see Heimskringla, p. 246; 7 Scriptores rerum Danicarum, III, 162. IF, XXVI, 344; XXVII, 304). 8 Professor Wilkinson ("Northumbrian Separatism," p. 514) believes that the here acted and declared Swegen n{oingr, but feels that it might have hesitated to pass a formal sentence of outlawry on him. He adds: "Swegen was already, in fact, an outlaw. ... " Whether this was so or not, the deeming of a man a n{oingr seems equivalent to a legal sentence of outlawry. (Cf. Steenstrup, Danelag, p. 258: " ... det at erkla:res for niding indeholder ikke blot en moralsk, men en juridisk Dom, saa at der herved er udtalt en Fredloskjendelse over Svend." Steenstrup cites examples of similar cases.) Professor Wilkinson is, very likely, correct in saying that the differences between a witenagemot and the here were perhaps "more clearly recognised than Freeman would allow," and in rejecting an identification ofwitan and army.
The Witan and Judicial Matters
105
After being thus severely dealt with, Swegen left the country. In the following year, however, he was back in England, reconciled to the king and fully restored to his honours. Any attempt to explain this strange event must be pure speculation, since the sources give very little information beyond the bare statement, "man geinlagode Swegen eorl," 1 which might be held to imply action by the witan. About all that can be said is that the in-lawing is evidence of the very unstable political situation in England around 1050. No doubt the various forces were manceuvring for position although the crisis did not come until 1051. 2 The crisis of 1051 ended with the outlawing of Godwin and his sons. The accounts of this episode pose a problem similar to that of the earlier outlawing of Swegen in 1049. What was the share of the witan and what the share of the here in these events? 3 Both the origin and the detailed story of the crisis are largely irrelevant to the elucidation of this question. Godwin and the king came into conflict, and the former summoned his followers to Beverstone while the king was at Gloucester with a comparatively small retinue. In the face of Godwin's threat he summoned earls Leofric and Siward, who came with a small company, no doubt some of their huscarles. 4 When the seriousness of the situation became apparent, the earls, and almost certainly the king as well, sent for greater forces. This brought to the side of the king possibly some prominent witan, large numbers of the standing army or pingmannali~, and, it may be, some extraordinary levies also. 5 The pingmannali~ or here was probably eager to fight, remembering its recent encounter with Swegen, but the witan may have counselled caution, possibly pointing out that time was on the side of the king. Negotiations apparently were carried on, since a rendezvous at London was ultimately agreed on. At that place Godwin and his sons were to appear and make their defence against the charges which had been levelled against them. 1 ASChr, C J050 and E 1047, only mention his return, Henry of Huntingdon (Hiswria Anglorum, p . 193) says he was in-lawed "cautela Godwini patris sui." 2 See Appendix S. 3 The best treatment of the crisis is Wilkinson, "Freeman and the Crisis," pp. 368-87, and in the main I follow the reconstruction of events therein set out. Professor Wilkinson's remarks on the various versions of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle I regard as eminently sound. As to the origin of the crisis Professor David Douglas has recently argued ("Edward the Confessor, Duke William of Normandy, and the English Succession," pp. 526-45) that King Edward made a promise of the throne to Duke William and sent Archbishop Robert of Canterbury to the duke in 1051 "to ratify the grant in the presence of the duke." This brought on the crisis, Professor Douglas thinks. 4 In the following account I have drawn upon ASChr, D 1052, which Professor Wilkinson has shown to be most reliable. Earl Ralph was probably with the king at Gloucester. 5 The later statement, that after a rendezvous at London had been agreed upon "the people were ordered out over all this north end, in Siward's earldom, and in Leofric's, and also elsewhere," suggests, however, that only the hireds of the earls and the here of the king appeared at this time.
106
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Coefessor
The language used by version D of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in reporting these events is not without significance. It is not a witenagemot that is decreed for London but a stefna, and "sceolde Godwine eorl 7 his suna ):>rer cuman to wi):>ermale." This suggests that the here rather than the witan made the decision, although it would be rash to rely too heavily on the Chronicle's language alone, for this, as has been pointed out, is extremely loose and inexact. Yet it would seem equally rash to deny the here a large share in the proceedings at Gloucester. It may even be possible that at that meeting the here took the leading part, at London the witan. At Gloucester the spiritual witan, with the exception of two or three prelates, may well have been absent. Certainly they would be present at London. At Gloucester, under the threat of civil war, the decisions may well have been made in assemblies of the armed retainers of the king and earls. This, too, is what one might expect. Faced with the threat of armed conflict, kings often made their decisions after asking the opinion of their armies. 1 'All the more would this be the case where the army was a professional force, having a definite organization and a code oflaws governing the behaviour of its members, one of whom, we have seen reason to believe, was Swegen. 2 It seems not unreasonable to conclude that the assembly at Gloucester was primarily one of the here, and that the decisions made there were made by the king and here, rather than by the king and witan. 3 The two are, of course, not entirely distinct, for many witan would be members of the here, and their functions as witan and warriors might and would overlap. But the here was more limited in its functions than the witan, for it could deal with only such matters as affected its members or were of a military nature. In addition the spiritual witan were not members of the here. Therefore, when the crisis was not resolved by armed conflict, the absent witan would naturally, if only for practical reasons, be summoned to support the king. 1
Numerous examples could be cited from the sagas of the Norwegian kings (Heims-
kringla, passim) of decisions made in the presence of, and with the acquiescence of, the
whole army just prior to battle, or when the arrival of an enemy force was feared. 2 Presumably Godwin and his other sons were also members. 3 The distinction between the here and the witenagemot has been, as noticed above, suggested by Professor Wilkinson ("Northumbrian Separatism," p . 514). He has also in his "Freeman and the Crisis" (pp. 378, 379) suggested that the gathering at Gloucester was not a witenagemot, but one of partisans in arms. With this I would largely agree, but would call the gathering one of the here, rather than one of partisans in arms. I would also add that it was not a witenagemot, not because Edward and the witan present were not competent to deal with the matter, but because it was not expedient to deal with it so, and because the here was under the circumstances (the absence of many witan and the military nature of the gathering) the logical body to settle whether the matter was to be put to the issue of arms or settled by more peaceful means. However, it must always be remembered that we are probably making distinctions which would never have occurred to an Anglo-Saxon.
The Witan and Judicial Matters
107
Thus, when the assembly at Gloucester ended without recourse to armed conflict and it was decided to settle the dispute in a council, it would inevitably follow that both the witan and the here would act with the king at London, even though the latter had acted alone, or at least played the most prominent part, at Gloucester. 1 In such an important matter the king would, for practical reasons, wish for the support of every influential man in the community. Either witan or here would be quite competent to outlaw Godwin and his sons, but the action of both would have greater weight. That both bodies acted at London is borne out by the language of the Chronicle, but the here appears to have anticipated the action of the witan, for Swegen was outlawed ("man utlagode J,a Swregn eorl") and then on the morrow the king held a witenagemot. This seems the most logical explanation, although it cannot be asserted that man does not mean the witan rather than the here. Yet it would seem strange that the witan would outlaw Swegen before they outlawed his father and brothers. It is quite understandable that the here would do this because the slaying of Beorn in 1049 still rankled. It would seem that Godwin was summoned to appear before both the king (and presumably his witan) and the here. At least it is difficult to understand otherwise the language of the Chronicle: "Pa ne onhagode him to cumenne to wii'Sermalc ongean pone cyng 7 agean pone here J,e him mid wres for pa on niht awreg 7 se cyng hrefde pres on morgen witenagemot 7 cwrei'S hine utlage 7 eall here hine 7 ealle his suna." 2 It is emphasized that Godwin was unwilling to come before the king and before the here, and the sentence is said to have been pronounced both by the king and by the here. 3 It would thus seem safe to conclude that sentence of outlawry was pronounced on Godwin and his sons by the king and his witan, and in addition by the here acting in the htiskarlastefna. This is in harmony with 1 I believe that, in view of what has been said above, one is justified in placing considerable emphasis on the language of the Chronicle, and that it greatly strengthens the view that it is the here that acts at Gloucester. It decides on a stefna at London, using a word that designates meetings of the standing army, i.e., the huskarlastefna. Again, Godwin is summoned to come to wii!ermale. This word is no doubt the same as the Olcel vii!rmzli, which, besides its ordinary sense of "conversation" or "a talking together," seems to have had a more technical sense, that of"defence," rebuttal," or " counter-plea" (indeed this sense may be detected in the Icelandic proverb, "Vi0urma:lis er hver ma0ur ver6ur") , and this, in our case, is the only sense it can have (see Vigfusson, IcelandicEnglish Dictionary, s.v. vii!rmzli, and especially Marius Ha:gstad og Alf Torp, Gamalnorsk Ordbog med Nynorsk Tyding, s.v. vii!rmzli) . It seems then not unreasonable to suppose that wii!ermak is used in a technical sense meaning a defence offered to a charge laid under the Vii!rlog. • ASChr, D 1052. Italics mine. 3 Larson's account (King's Household, pp. 16~7) agrees with mine in emphasizing the part played by the here in the crisis, but he seems inclined to identify here and witenagemot to a far greater extent than I think is warranted.
1 o8
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Coefessor
the concept of the witan advanced in this work. A witenagemot never . performs an act, the individual witan do; the here performs many acts in its corporate capacity, its individual members never. 1 In the in-lawing of Godwin the here appears to have had a minor role, if any. Of course, Godwin was able to regain his position because of the armed forces he was able to muster. The witan, however, played an important part in preventing bloodshed and arranging a pacific settlement. King Edward seems to have vigorously opposed any reconciliation with Godwin, but to have been overruled by the witan led by Bishop Stigand who, it appears, was the principal mediator. 2 This is a singular instance in which the witan seem to have imposed their will on the king. 3 They play, thus, the major role in the restoration of Godwin, and have, no doubt, to bear the responsibility for the outlawing of the Frenchmen, 4 for this must have been as distasteful to the king as the restoration of Godwin. During the remainder of the reign only two individuals are known to have been outlawed. On the twice repeated outlawry of Earl 1Elfgar the sources give little information which· would enable one to assess the share of the witan in the proceedings. According to one version of the Chronicle, 5 1Elfgar was outlawed in 1055 in a witenagemot at London. This version also gives one to understand that it was Earl Harold who arranged the terms of reconciliation. From this one might suspect that Harold was the man responsible for 1Elfgar's outlawry in the first place. Nor is it unreasonable to see in this episode a part of Harold's manceuvring for position. 6 Even less is known of the details of the second outlawing of 1Elfgar in 1058 and his subsequent restoration. 7 1 Cf. ASChr, C 1049, D 1052. • ASChr, E 1052. His role is comparable to that ofLeofric at Gloucester (FlWig, 1051). 3 How else is one to understand the words of ASChr, E 1052: "Then the king however refused for some while; so long until the people who were with the earl were much excited against the king and against his folk; so that the earl himself with difficulty stilled his people. Then went Bishop Stigand to them, with God's support, and the wise men, both within the town and without, and they resolved that hostages should be fixed on each side and it was so done"? Had the king proceeded to extremes, it is impossible to say what would have happened. • ASChr, C 1052. 5 ASChr, C 1055. The other versions, D and E 1055, mention only his outlawry, the former saying he was almost without guilt, the latter that he was charged with being a traitor and confessed this, although involuntarily. Version Eis silent as to how he was restored, but D says that after the greatest evil had been done, then "man ger.edde ),one rzd f, man £lfgar eorl geinnlagode 7 ageaf him his eorldom 7 call f, him ofgenumen w.es." Florence of Worcester (1055) says he was "sine culpa" and that Harold arranged the terms of his reinstatement. 6 Freeman was uneasy as to Harold's share in the matter: " .•. he [Harold] may possibly have felt that he was himself in some sort the cause of all that had happened, if he had promoted any ill-considered charges against his rival''. (NC, II, 264). Professor Stenton (ASEng, p. 566) speaks of £lfgar as having been outlawed twice "by a court under Harold's influence." 7 Only ASChr, D 1058 (echoed by Fl Wig, 1058) mentions it, giving no details. Professor
The Witan and Judicial Matters
J09
The witan of England can hardly have played an important part in the outlawing of Earl Tostig in w65. This was really the work of the Northumbrians, and the role of the witan must have been limited to persuading Edward to accept the inevitable. There is no reason to suppose that Edward and the witan banished Tostig, but they did give way to the demands of the Northumbrians that he depart from England. ' In none of the above cases can the witan really be said to have performed the function of a high court of justice, for it is not known that any of the individuals outlawed (unless it be Tostig) appeared before them as before a tribunal to make his defence. On the contrary, the sentences, if they may be called such, were pronounced on the culprit in his absence and, it seems, in accord with the wishes of the monarch rather than on the basis of evidence of guilt. 2 This is, of course, not surprising, for the issues are political rather than judicial, and are decided by the armed strength of the protagonists. The witan, no doubt, offer counsel, but they can hardly be said to hand down a verdict, much less a judgment arrived at after a judicious examination of the facts of the case. 3 The witenagemot as a high court of justice is, therefore, little in evidence during the reign of Edward the Confessor. The activities of the witan in the above cases belong rather to the political than the judicial sphere. Stenton (ASEng, p. 566) suggests that the allocation of the earldoms in 1057 may have driven lElfgar to rebellion. 1 See ASChr, C, D I065, E 1o64; Vita Eduuardi, pp. 421-3. The best recent treatment of the revolt is Wilkinson, "Northumbrian Separatism," pp. 504-26. 2 By and large it may be said that in dealing with a king, an individual who had offended the former could expect justice at the king's hands in proportion to his own ability to oppose the king or to rally friends to his support. This is strikingly apparent in the Scandinavian cases cited above, and there is little reason to think that conditions were much different in England. 3 Or, if this is too modern terminology, after offering the defendant every opportunity to clear himself. Godwin, it is true, was offered this to some extent in I051, and he did clear himself in 1052 before his reconciliation with the king, but both instances smack of formality, and have little real meaning as far as a judicial trial is concerned.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Conclusion THE foregoing examination of the witan in the reign of Edward the Confessor seems to substantiate the view that the witenagemot was little more than a court council. Its essential members were the great prelates and the great earls. In addition there attended such thegns as filled the household offices and provincial posts and, rarely, the clergy of the royal chapel and writing office. The word "witenagemot" had no technical meaning beyond the literal meaning of a meeting of the witan, that is a meeting of such royal counsellors as happened to be with the king or such as he summoned ad hoc. In no case should it be understood as meaning a corporate body, which, in its corporate capacity, had either well-defined functions or clearly accepted jurisdictions. A witenagemot was the occasion on which the king and his counsellors transacted business of one kind or another. Even the word "witan" can hardly be said to have meant anything except as it was used to describe the men whom the king consulted, his counsellors, who are in the main only the members of his court. These courtiers are the equivalent of the Scandinavian "hir~menn," "ra~gjafar," or "handgengnir menn," the men who in Cnut's reign are called "cynges rredesmen," or men like Stigand who is called King Edward's "rredgifa 7 his handprest." The witan are men of substance who hold important ecclesiastical or civil offices. They are individuals on whom the king relies for the government of the country. There is nothing to show that they were a numerous body, and there is nothing to show that any of them had any constitutional right to be counsellors of the king. The witenagemot is a national assembly only to the extent that the king's court is the centre of the government of the country. In fact it is difficult to discuss the witenagemot without implying to it much more modern characteristics than it actually possessed. As is well known, representative government, which appeared in the later Middle Ages, was an institution of very slow growth, and it is necessary, in discussing government in the early Middle Ages, to avoid reading into words the implications oflater ages. Royal officials in the Middle Ages had a dual function. They were representatives of the Crown and they were also representatives of the folk. But they were not representatives of the latter in the sense that the folk had different interests than the king. There is no antithesis between the two parties. Both exist to maintain the law; in fact, that is
Conclusion
I II
almost the sole function of both parties. Both co-operate to ensure that to every individual justice be done. The greatest safeguard of the rights of both king and folk lies in the deep-felt and almost implicit idea of the supremacy of law. Certain methods of procedure are right, not because they are constitutional, but because they are old and satisfactory. To an Anglo-Saxon, what was important was not machinery but principles, not methods but results •. The state exists, not to tell one what is right, but to preserve a way oflife which is right. Modern society is legislative society. Mediaeval society is preservative society. Nineteenth-century historians, with their veneration for constitutional government, focused their eyes on the machinery through which, and to which, the nineteenth-century system of government had evolved, and not on basic ideas. To them constitutional government existed only where institutions similar to those of their ideal government could be found. It was almost inconceivable to the nineteenth-century historians that without these institutions the rights and liberties of the subject could be maintained. For them the conflicting interests of the state and the individual were real. They saw in the primitive society of the Anglo-Saxons a conflict between government and subject, which only a much later and more complex society could feel and consciously envisage. Without machinery to protect him the Anglo-Saxon was, in their eyes, helpless before the tyranny which characterizes all governments. In actual fact, this is very far from the truth. The Anglo-Saxon was protected, not by machinery, but by the current and deeply affirmed principle of the supremacy of law, to which all alike owed obedience and for the maintenance of which all alike were duty bound to strive. In a society as primitive and unselfconscious as that of the eleventh-century Anglo-Saxons, no machinery could be devised which would serve to curb the desire for power on the part of individuals or the king, if the fundamental ideas of right and wrong were not genuinely felt and sincerely accepted by the majority of the people. With the development of more absolutist ideas after the Conquest, it required three or four centuries for the baronage to devise machinery which was at all capable of curbing the ambitions of powerful kings. With identical machinery at all times, the Icelandic republic experienced in the period 930-1264 vastly different circumstances. It knew in the tenth century a period of aristocratic rule, during which the idea of the supremacy oflaw was strong. This idea limited to a great extent any abuse ofpower, the opportunity for which was afforded by the unequal distribution of wealth among a relatively small number of chieftains. In the eleventh century, Iceland, with the same machinery, and with the old pagan ideas of the supremacy of law still vital and possibly reinforced by
.1 12
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
new Christian conceptions, experienced a golden age, in which the rule of law was facilitated by the break-up of the great estates of the previous century and by a more equitable distribution of wealth. The twelfth century witnessed the decay of old heathen principles, and the new Christianity was unable to fill the void quickly enough. At the same time the introduction of the tithe was making possible the resumption of wealth and power into the hands of a few families. As a result, Iceland, still with the same machinery of government, experienced a period of lawlessness and anarchy which ended only with the exhaustion of the state and the passing of the republic. The witan of England were not a corporate body; they were not a body with definite rights and fixed functions; they did not constitute a national assembly in any real sense of that term; they were not representatives of the nation in the nineteenth-century meaning of that word. In short, any attempt to discuss them from the standpoint of representative and parliamentary government must end in misunderstanding. The witan were creatures of the king, but they were not creatures in the same sense as the officials of the royal household in the later Middle Ages. These latter, as the bureaucracy developed and the central government extended its jurisdiction, became conscious of a dichotomy of Crown and subject. Inevitably as royal government grew, the need of the Crown for revenue increased and the interests of the monarch grew greater than the interests of even the greatest subject. What seemed of vital importance to the royal bureaucrats of the later Middle Ages was often an unnecessary or foolish venture from the standpoint of the subject. Much of the business of the Crown was of no interest to the individual subject and he saw no personal benefit accruing from it. It was the resultant cleavage which forced the later Middle Ages to attempt the reconciliation between strong government and individual liberty. Anglo-Saxon England, on the other hand, hardly knew these problems which accompany centralization and the growth of wealth and culture. The witan certainly felt no cleavage between the interest of folk and Crown. They were servants of both; in fact both king and witan were but representatives of the sole existing reality, the race, whose welfare was assured in the maintenance of the good, old law. Both king and witan are toiling toward the same goal. To say that either has certain exclusive functions, or that the one is superior to the other, is to introduce distinctions which have no meaning. The importance of the witan does not lie in their existence as a curb upon royal power. It lies rather in their representation, unconscious though it may have been, of the principle that all elements of societyCrown or witan or folk-exist for the purpose of guaranteeing the funda-
Conclusion
II3 mental principles on which the well-being of society depends. In this there can be no distinction between king and witan. Co-operation to this end is the only real duty of both. It is in this embodiment of the co-operative principle of government that the witan are important. It was this that they unconsciously handed down to William the Conqueror and his successors. Parliament and our present institutions of central government are, as far as machinery is concerned, basically of feudal origin. But much of the spirit of these institutions-and that is the all-important factor 1-is of Anglo-Saxon origin, and this spirit, which also permeated the institutions of local government, is our most important legacy from the Anglo-Saxons. In many ways the Conquest was a calamity; it may well be, however, that the need of William the Conqueror to pose as the successor of the Anglo-Saxon king helped to preserve the fundamental Anglo-Saxon idea of king and witan, king and folk, as partners, not rivals, in the work of government. It has leavened the whole of our history. 1 Cf. Davis, EHR, XXVIII, 427, where, writing on Liebermann, he says: "Like them [Stubbs and the Gennanists] he prefers to think of this system [ the Anglo-Saxon] as an ideal, as a set of traditions and general principles, which did not change very much from one generation to another."
B 4133
APPENDIX A
Opinions of Some Historians on the Functions of the Witan HERE I have quoted Kemble's canons and then cited the pages whereon they are discussed, or alluded to, by some outstanding scholars.
CANON I Kemble : First and in general, they possessed a consultative voice, and the right to consider every public act, which could be authorized by the king (Saxons, II, 204) .
Liebermann, Stubbs, Stenton, Morris, Jolliffe,
NA, § 53. CH, I, 140, cf. 141, 148. ASEng, p. 544. CH1216, p. 59. CHMed, p. 25.
CANON II Kemble: The witan deliberated upon the making of new laws which were to be added to the existing folcriht, and which were then promulgated by their own and the king's authority (Saxons, II, 205-6). Is it not manifest that he [Ethelred], like }Elfred, really felt the legislative power to reside in the witan, rather than in the king? (ibid., p. 213) . [It is hardly necessary to say that the expression, "legislative power," must be greatly qualified, whatever Kemble may have meant by it. As Jolliffe says: "Of legislation, as we understand it, there was, of course, almost nothing" (CHMed, p. 29).]
Liebermann, Stubbs, Stenton, Morris, Jolliffe,
NA,§ 60. CH, I, 157; cf. 141-3.
ASEng, p. 544. CH1216, pp. 60, 61 . CHMed, pp. 24, 25; cf. p. 177.
CANON III Kemble: The witan had the power of making alliances and treaties of peace, and of settling their terms (Saxons, II, 213).
Liebermann, Stubbs, Stenton, Morris, Jolliffe,
NA,§ 54. CH, I, 148. ASEng, p. 544. CH1216, p. 61 . CHMed, p. 103.
Opinions of Some Historians on the Functions of the Witan
115
CANON IV Kemble : The witan had the power of electing the king (Saxons, II, 214). Liebermann, NA,§§ 49, 50. Cf. Chadwick, Studies, pp. 355-66. Stubbs, CH, I, 151. Stenton, ASEng, pp. 544, 543. Morris, CHr:116, p. 60. Jolliffe, CHMed, pp. 31-32. CANON V Kemble: The witan had the power to depose the king if his government was not conducted for the benefit of the people (Saxons, II, 219). Liebermann, Stubbs, Stenton, Morris, Jolliffe,
NA,§§ 49, 50. CH, I, 153, 155. ASEng, p. 203. CHr:116, p. 35. CHMed, pp. 31-32. Cf. Kern, Kingship and Law, p. 86.
CANON VI Kemble: The king and the witan had power to appoint prelates to vacant sees (Saxons, II, 221) . Liebermann, NA,§ 56. Cf. Bohmer, Kirche und Staat, p. 50. Stubbs, CH, I, 149-50. Stenton, ASEng, p. 544, 538-g. See also Knowles, The Monastic Order, p. 396. Morris, CH1216, pp. 61-62. CHMed, p. 136. Jolliffe, CANON VII Kemble : [The witan] had also the power to regulate ecclesiastical matters, appoint fasts and festivals, and decide upon the levy and expenditure of ecclesiastical revenue (Saxons, II, 222). Liebermann, NA,§ 56. See also Bohmer, Kirche und Staat, p. 50. Stubbs, CH, I, 143. Stenton, ASEng, p. 538. See also Knowles, The Monastic Order, p. 650. Morris, CH1216, p. 243. See also Rose Graham, Ecclesiastical Studies, p. 164. Jolliffe, CHMed, p. 29. CANON VIII Kemble: The king and the witan had the power to levy taxes for the public services (Saxons, II, 223). Liebermann, NA, § 59. Stubbs, CH, I, 148. Stenton, ASEng, p. 544. Morris, CH1216, p. 63. Jolliffe, CHMed, pp. 127-31.
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
CANON IX Kemble: The king and witan had power to raise land and sea forces when occasion demanded (Saxons, II, 224). (Kemble admits that the king "always possessed of himself the right to call out the ban or armed militia of the freemen" but adds that in extraordinary circumstances "the authority of the witan was added to that of the king; and that much more extensive levies were made than by merely calling out the hereban or landsturm," e.g., naval forces (ibid., pp. 224-5).] Liebermann, NA, § 58. Stubbs, CH, I, 148. Stenton, ASEng, p. 544. Morris, CH1216, p. 61. CHMed, p. 29. Jolliffe, CANON X Kemble: The witan possessed the power of recommending, assenting to, and guaranteeing grants of land, and of permitting the conversion of folcland into bocland, and vice versa (Saxons, II, 225). Liebermann, NA, §§ 28, 29, 62. Stubbs, CH, I, 145, 157. Stenton, ASEng, pp. 308, 544. Morris, CH1216, p. 63. Jolliffe, "English Book-right," p. 6; cf. CHMed, p. 74. CANON XI Kemble: The witan possessed the power of adjudging the lands of offenders and intestates to be forfeit to the king (Saxons, II, 228). Liebermann, NA,§§ 61, 62. Stubbs, CH, I, 147. Stenton, ASEng, p. 544. Morris, CH11u6, p. 62. Jolliffe, CHMed, p. 28. CANON XII Kemble: Lastly the witan acted as a supreme court of justice, both in civil and criminal cases (Saxons, II, 229). Liebermann, NA,§ 61. Stubbs, CH, I, 147. Stenton, ASEng, p. 544· Morris, CH1216, p. 62. Jolliffe, CHMed, pp. 28, 29, 108, 177.
APPENDIX B
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters IN all cases I have listed the charters on which the name of a witness appears as follows: in ordinary type, the charters I believe genuine; in ordinary type but within brackets, the charters I regard as doubtful; in italics, the charters I deem spurious. JEdridg, thegn. Signs CD, 771. JElfgar, earl ofMercia (ob. ca. 1062). He was earl of East Anglia during Harold's exile 1051-2 and succeeded to it again when Godwin died in 1053. In 1057 on the death of his father he became earl of Mercia and retained this until his death sometime after 1062. I am inclined to think that he lived until 1065 (why does DB, 0, 154 report that Oxford paid dues to Earl .£lfgar TRE if another earl held it for four years before the Conquest, as Freeman thought (NC, II, 312)?) . .£lfgar's signature before he became earl seems to occur very infrequently, or at least cannot be readily distinguished from other thegns of the same name. Signs CD, 788 (jJe Eries sunu), 805,811,956; (810); 785,813, g63, g64. /Elfgar, thegn, the brother of Ordgar and Esbem (CD, 1334). I am unable to identify this man beyond saying that I believe he came from the southwest of England (cf. ASC, pp. 434,448, and 459). Signs CD, 768,774,775, 776, 780, 781, FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (770,778); 771, It is also possible that the .£lfgar who signs CD, 811, as consiliarius and CD, 787, as nobilis (both genuine) is the same man. He has been identified as a Somerset thegn (TCPB, p. 80) in the case of CD, 811, and is possibly the witness on the doubtful CD, 816. It should be mentioned that .£lfgar of Minehead, So (CD, 1334), is a possibility for some of the above charters. The puzzling thing about the witness lists is that Earl .£lfgar does not seem to sign more than one or two charters before he became earl, for there seems to be little doubt that it is .£lfgar, the brother of Ordgar, who signs most of the above charters. It would be tempting to identify Earl .£lfgar as the brother ofOrdgar, but this seems impossible (NC, II, 443-6). There are so many .£lfgars in the reign of the Confessor that we cannot in most cases be certain which one is meant (see PNDB, s. Algar and .£Ifgar). /Elfgar, thegn, the father of Beorhtric (CD, 804). He held lands in GI and Wo. Signs CD, 805. JElfgeat, thegn. On CD, 767, the name occurs twice, but I think that its first appearance must be the result of a clerical error, since it precedes those of the bishops, and the witness list as a whole appears jumbled. I am unable to identify this man or men, except to say that one may be the sheriff of Mx (CD, 858). Another possibility is a So thegn (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 811; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 778, 816); 772. JElfgeat, notarius. Who this purports to be I do not know. An .£lfgeat presbyter held lands in C and So (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 825.
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
JElfgifu Emma, queen mother. She was the wife of (1) Ethelred and (2) Cnut. Her death occurred March 6, 1052. She was despoiled by the king in 1043, but whether she was still in disgrace when she died is not known (see Appendix M). Signs CD, 768, 773, 774, 775, 788, 1332; (767, 962); 771,779,916. JElfnoa, thegn. This is probably the ..Elfn~ who held lands of Peterborough (DB, L, 345b, 346; LD, index, s.n. Alnod). Signs CD, 806, 819; 813, 815, 824, 825,912. /Elfric, archbishop of York 1023-51. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 783, 784, 787, 791, 797, 1335; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 770, 778); 771, 772, 779, 785, 786,794,912,916. JElfric, bishop. This name occurs on CD, 813, but no bishop of that name was living in J062. There was a bishop with that name at Elmham (1038/g--1042/3), on whom see Writs, p. 549. JElfric, abbot of Pershore ca. 1033--ca. w55 (ASC, p. 460). Signs CD, 797,807; 771, 772,912,939. JElfric, monk of Worcester. This is probably the brother of Earl Odda, and Miss Robertson is very likely right in thinking that the scribe misread min for mon when copying this charter on which alone this name with such a designation appears (see ASC, p. 457). Signs CD, 797. JElfric, thegn. This is a very common name and it is difficult to be certain in each case as to the identity of the man . ..Elfric Withgar's son (CD, 978) certainly witnesses some of the charters on which the name ..Elfric appears. He was Queen Emma's deputy in the eight-and-a-half Bury hundreds and a landowner in the eastern counties (ASC, p. 425, ASW, p. 188). Signs CD, 788, HLC, pp. 301r2; CD (769, 962). JElfric, thegn. Another ..Elfric is probably a thegn in the southwest, perhaps a So thegn (PNDB, s.n.). This ..Elfric might be the brother of Earl Odda (CD, 804; NC, II, 380). Signs CD, 781,787; FASM, II, Exeter xii. It may be mentioned that an ..Elfric was sheriff of Hu (CD, 903) and another sheriff of C (DB, C, 189), but I do not think they witness any of these charters. JElfsige, abbot. There is an abbot of this name at Peterborough but he died in 1042 (ASChr, E 1041) and was succeeded by Eamwig (ibid.) who resigned in 1052 (ibid., E 1052). Miss Robertson says (ASC, p. 405) that ..Elfsige was abbot of Peterborough from 1005 to 1055, but this is an error. The ..Elfsige who signs these charters is therefore likely to be the ..Elfsige abbot of St. Benedict at Hulme (101g--ca. 1046). Signs CD, 774, 775; (769) . JElfstan, abbot of St. Augustine 1023/7-1046 (cf. ASC, p. 420). Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780; (769); 772,779,916. JElfstan, thegn. The name occurs frequently. The most likely man seems to be the one who held lands in So, Do, Ha, Br, GI, Ht, and Bd, as well as in W, where Boscombe, with which he is often identified, is located (PNDB, s.n.). CD, 767, grants him Sevenhampton, W (DB, W, 71b). He is very likely the sheriff of CD, 945, although of what shire is uncertain. Kemble (Saxons, II, 167) made it Ht. Signs CD, 773 (as staller), 774, 775, 776, 780, 781; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 770, 778, 793,816); 772, 779, Boo, 813,912. JElfstan, monk of Worcester. Miss Robertson thought that the mon after this name on CD, 797, might be an error for min (ASC, p. 457), but this does not seem
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters
1 19
likely for an ,Elfstan sacerdos signs HLC, pp. 247-8. He became prior of Worcester in 1061 (Harmer, Writs, pp. 550-1). Signs CD, 797, HLC, pp. 247-8. /Elfweald, bishop of Sherborne, 1045/6-1058 (ASC, p. 447; GP, p. 183. The tenninal date is erroneously given as 1050 in RAS; p. 36, and in Knowles, The Monastic Order, p. 700). Signs CD, 784, 787, 956; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (792,793); 772, 813, 916. /Elfweald, thegn. This name is likely that of a landowner in Wo (VCH, Wo, i, 316a, 318a, 318b, 320a). Signs CD (823); 8o1, 813. /Elfweald, thegn. This is the brother of Leofwine (q.v.). Signs CD (962). /Elfweard, bishop of London 1035-44. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 788; (769); 771,772. /Elfweard, abbot. This name occurs only once, CD, 775, with the title of du.x along with others who must be abbots but are also titled duces. There is little doubt that this is ,Elfweard, bishop of London. He was previously abbot of Evesham (from 1014) and retained that office after he became bishop (FlWig, 1044). /Elfweard, thegn. This name is very common and occurs frequently. In at least two instances it would seem to belong to a So thegn (ASC, 489). Signs CD, 787, 1332. /Elfweard, thegn. On most of these charters the name is probably that of ,Elfweard of Longdon, Wo (ASC, p. 459 and also 449). Signs CD (769, 770, 778, 792, 793); Boo, 939 (de Knifarton). /Elfwig, abbot of Bath ca. 1060-5 (TCPB, p. 19; RB, LIi, 98), or ,Elfwig, abbot of the New Minster, Winchester, and brother of Godwin. The latter was abbot of the New Minster ca. 1063-6 and was slain at Hastings. The name ,Elfwig occurs on CD (778,817); 772,813,817. The.signature of either of these two men on CD, 778, is almost certainly impossible. There is, however, great mystery about the brother of Godwin (see NC, II, 45g-61), and he may have been an abbot earlier than 1063. It is also possible that -wig may have been written instead of -wine (cf. PNDB, p. 125). This would remove the difficulties, for ,Elfwine of the New Minster would be acceptable. /Elfwig, thegn. There was a sheriff of GI with this name (Morris, Sheriff, p. 35). He may be our man. The name occurs twice with the title of praefectus on CD (767), but I suspect that it is repeated in error. It occurs only on doubtful or spurious charters. Signs CD (767, 792, 793); Boo. /Elfwine, bishop of Winchester 1032-47. Signs CD, 773, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 783, 784, 788, 1332, 1335; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 770,778); 771, 772, 779, 785, 813. /Elfwine, abbot. There are three abbots of this name: ( 1) ,Elfwine of Buckfast. His dates are not known but probably include the early years of the Confessor's reign. I conjecture that he may have attested CD, 1332; (767). (2) ,Elfwine of the New Minster ca. 1032-57 (on the dating see ASC, pp. 418, 437). I conjecture that he may have attested CD, 773 and 956; FASM, II, Exeter xii. (3) ,Elfwine of Ramsey 1043-79 (when £thelsige of St. Augustine was appointed
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
to assist or succeed }Elfwine is not clear, for the latter lived long after the Conquest (NC, IV, 5og-11)). Of the three this man is the most important, for he was an intimate of the Confessor. Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 787,791, 1332; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (778,796); 772,779, Boo, Bog, 813,824, g63,g64. IElfwine, thegn (possibly known as the Red). This is probably the son of the }Elfwine Wulfned who is well known from Cnut's reign. He lived in K (CrawCol, p. 50; ASC, p. 464). Signs CD, 773, 788; (769, 962). IElfwine, thegn. This is probably a tenant of the bishop of Winchester and/or of the Confessor (ASC, p. 464). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (770). IEstan, thegn. This is a Bk thegn, the father of Leofwine (q.v.). Signs HLC, pp. 247--8. . IEthelfrid, thegn. He held lands in Do and So (PNDB, s.n. In this work JEthelis spelled }El5el, but I have disregarded this and in all cases referred to such names as s.n.). Signs CD, 811; (816). IEthelmzr, bishop of Elmham 1047-70, brother of Stigand (ASC, p. 431). Professor Knowles, for some reason, gives the terminal date as 1055 (The Monastic Order, p. 698). Signs CD, 956; (816); 785, 801, 813. IEthelmzr, thegn. This is likely the son of Kola j,zs cyninges heahgerefa (ASChr, A 1001), who met the Vikings who came up the Exe at Pinhoe, D. Signs CD, 787; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 796, 816). IEthelmund, thegn. Signs CD, 813. IEthelnoo, abbot of Glastonbury 1053-78. Signs CD, 811, 822; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (816,817); 8o1, 813, 815, g64. IEthelnoo, thegn. This is probably intended to be the JEthelnol5 cild, who held lands in K, Sr, So, D, Co, E, Sx, and Ha, and who is called by Florence of Worcester ( 1067) satrapam Agelnothum Cantwariensem (PNDB, s.n. ). He was probably sheriff of K, although this is only conjecture. Signs CD, Boo, 824. IEthelric, bishop of Durham 1042-56. His signature is found only on the spurious CD, 779• . IEthelric, bishop of Selsey 1057-70 (ASChr, E 1058). Signs CD (810, 816). IEthelric, thegn. There are so many thegns by this name in southwest England that identification is impossible (see PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 793); 770, Boo. IEthelric, thegn. This is Bishop Beorhtheah's brother in Wo. Signs HLC, pp. 2478; CD (767). IEthelric Rufus, thegn. I am unable to identify this man. Signs CD (962). IEthelsige, abbot of St. Augustine, Canterbury (May 26, 1061-?). He was sent on an embassy to Scandinavia in 1068 and outlawed in 1070. Later he returned to Ramsey and died there in 1087. On him see TCPB, p. 78; NC, IV, 509-11. Signs CD, 822; (817); 771, Bog, 813,824,825, g63, g64. IEthelsige, thegn. This is a So thegn who was the steward of Queen Eadgyl5 (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 811; 916. /Ethelstan, bishop of Hereford 1012-56. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 784, 7!'.)7; (767, 769,778); 771,779,912,916.
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters
121
IEthelstan, abbot of Abingdon 1044~. Signs CD, 776, 780, 781; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (778). IEthelstan, thegn. This is likely a landowner in L (LD, index s.n. Adestan). Signs CD, 819. IEthelweard, abbot of Glastonbury (ob. I053). Signs CD, 774, 776, 780, 781, 787, 791; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 792, 793, 796); 772, 779, 785. IEthelweard, thegn. Probably this is the }Ethelweard Tochesone of D (PNDB, s.n.) at least in the latter case. Signs HLC, pp. 301>-2; FASM, II, Exeter xii. IEthelwig, abbot of Evesham 1059-77. Signs CD, 811, 822; HLC, pp. 247~; CD (778, 823); 772, Bog. IEthelwig, priest. I do not know who this is unless it be the above abbot before he was raised to that office. Signs CD, 7g6. IEthelwig, thegn. This may be the thegn surnamed banesona, who held in D and So and whose lands passed to Alured de Hispania (see PNDB, s.n.). One of the wealthiest thegns of Nf and Sf had this name and was connected with Thetford (EHR, XXXVII, 233; PNDB, s.n.), but I cannot connect him with these charters. Signs CD, 775; (767, 816); 77r, g64 (}Ethelwig of Thetford might be intended in these two forgeries). IEthelwig, thegn. Who this is, I do not know. Signs CD (816). IEthelwine, bishop of Durham I056-71. As in the case of his predecessor, }E. signs only once, and that on a spurious charter, CD, 813. IEthelwine, dean of Worcester. He may have become prior (see ASC, p. 457). Signs CD, 797, 807; 912. IEthelwine, thegn. This is most likely }Ethelwine the father ofTurchil and sheriff ofWa (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD (769). IEthelwine, thegn. This is }Ethelwine the Black (Chron Rameseiensis, p. 209) who was sheriff of Hu. Signs CD (962). IEthelwine, thegn. This may be the }Ethelwine who held in So and whose lands went to Alured de Hispania (TCPB, p. 80). Signs CD, 811; FASM, II, Exeter xii. Agemund, thegn. He is possibly a thegn of L (PNDB, s.n., and LD, index s. Agemund). Signs CD, 819. Askell, thegn. He was the son of Toki and an important landowner in L (LD, pp. xi-xii, xliv, and index s. Aschil, s. of Toke). Signs CD, 808. Azur, thegn. This is a well-known thegn of Wo (ASC, p. 458; NC, II, 381). Signs CD, 805,807; HLC, pp. 247~; CD (823). Azur, thegn. This is probably a thegn in Br, who in DB is called dispensator regis E . (PNDB, s.n.). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (769); 813 (regis dapifer). Azur, thegn. This man, called the Red, may be a thegn of K (ASC, p. 437). Signs CD, 773. Baldwin, abbot of Bury St. Edmunds I065-98. His signature never occurs except on spurious charters. Signs CD, Bog, 813 (regis capellanus), 824, 825. Beorhtmzr, abbot of Croyland. His dates are usually given as IO 18-48, but Miss Robertson thinks he may have been alive as late as I053 (ASC, p. 458). I am of the same opinion. Signs CD, 956.
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
Beorhtric, abbot of Malmesbury 1062-70. Signs CD (817); g64. Beorhtric, priest. This is possibly the above abbot before he was elevated to that office. Signs CD (792, 793); Boo. Beorhtric, thegn. The name occurs often on the witness lists. In some cases it probably belongs to a Wiltshire thegn and companion of Eadric of Laxfield (see Feudal Documents, p. xciii). Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD ( 767, 769, 778, 796); 772, Boo. Beorhtric, thegn. This man would seem to be the son of ..£lfgar, lord of Gloucester. On him see NC, IV, 10g--10, 517-19; TCPB, p. 80. Signs CD, 805 (IElfgares sunu), 807, 811 (consiliarius); HLC, pp. 247--8, 300-2; CD (810, 816, 823); 813, 815, g64. This Beorhtric may well have signed some of the charters I have attributed to the other one. Beorhtweald, bishop of Ramsbury 1005-45. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769,778); 771,772,779,916. Beorhtwine, bishop of Sherborne 1023-45. Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781; (767); 771,772,916. Beorhtwine, thegn. This is probably the B. predives who gave land to the church of Worcester (ASC, p. 461). Signs HLC, pp. 247--8; CD (823); 813. Beorhtwine, thegn. This may have been a thegn of Edward in Do (PNDB, s.n.). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii. Beam, earl of the Middle Angles ca. 1045. He was slain by Swegen in 1049. King Sveinn Ulfsson of Denmark was his brother. Signs CD, 781, 784, 787; (778) ; 912. He never signs as minister. Bondi, thegn. This is the well-known staller of Edward. He held lands in Dr, Bk, Bd, GI, 0, Nth, and E. Round thinks he was sheriffofBd (EHR, XIX, 91). Signs CD, 811, 822 (steallere); (810, 816); 813 (regis palatinus), 824, 825. Brand, abbot of Peterborough, November 1, 1066---9. Signs CD, g63. Burgrzd (Burhtredus), thegn. Feilitzen identifies him as a thegn holding lands in Bd, Bk, and Nth (PNDB, s.n.). He was a very important landowner (see VCH, Bk, I, 240b, 241a; VCH, Nth, I, 287). Signs CD (962). Carl, thegn. This may be the Carl who held lands in Sx, Sr, Ha, W, and So (PNDB, s.n. Karl). There is a Carl, father of Godric and Godwine, in K (VCH,
K, III, 223,231). I think, however, that the former is the witness on these charters. Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780,781; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769,778); 771. Ceolmaer, thegn. One man with this name is mentioned in DB (Wo, 176b). He held Doddenham, Wo. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8. Ceolric, thegn. This was probably
a thegn in So (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 791.
Ceolweald (Celfpendus), thegn. A man of this name is mentioned in DB, holding lands in Sf (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 791. Cola, thegn. Signs CD, 825. Cynesige, archbishop of York 1051-60. Signs CD, 806,807,956; HLC, pp. 300-2; ( 796 (presbyter)) ; Boo (presbyter). Cynesige, thegn. The only entries under this name in DB are in So and Co. Signs CD (793).
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters
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Cyneweard, thegn. This may be the C. to whom, along with Godwin and Bishop Hercman, CD, 948, is addressed, although it is strange that DB shows no lands under that name in Br, and it may well be that Kemble (Saxons, II, 167) is wrong in making him sheriff of Br. The man we have-here may have been a royal reeve or local magnate in Wo. Lands by men of this name are found in DB in Wo, E, GI, and Wa (PNDB, s.n.; Morris, Sheriff, p. 43). Signs CD, 807; (767 (praefectus)), (792 (praepositus), 796 (praepositus)) ; Boo (praepositus). Dodda, thegn. It is difficult to identify this man and the signatures may belong to more than one individual. The most likely man is a Co thegn (PNDB, s.n.; but cf. ASC, pp. 448, 490). Signs CD, 787, 791, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (767, 770); 771, 813. Duduc, bishop of Wells 1033-6o. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 784, 787, 791, 807, 956, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (767,770, 778, 793), 771, 772, 779, Boo, 912,916. Eahpisus, thegn. This may be an error for Ealwine or some such name, but identification is impossible. Signs CD, 791. EadgyiJ, queen. Edward married Eadgyl:I, the daughter of Godwin, in January 1045. She died December 18, 1075. Signs CD, 776, 780, 781, 783, 805, 807, 808, 819, 822, 956, 1335; (778, 810, 816, 817, 823); 779, 785, 794, Bog, 813, 815, 824, 825, 916, g63, g64. Eadmzr, thegn. This seems to be Eadm~r at Burham, who signs also under Cnut (ASC, p. 411; CrawCol, p. 151). He held in K. Signs CD, 773; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (769). Eadmzr, thegn. This is probably Eadmrer atre who had lands in D, So, and E, and likely the man known as E. attile (atule) of Ht, Mx, and Bk (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 811. Eadmund, abbot of Pershore ca. 106o-85. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8; CD, 813, 825,g64. EadnoiJ, bishop of Dorchester 1034-49. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 784; (767, 769, 778,962); 771,779,912,916. EadnoiJ, thegn. This is intended to be King Edward's staller, killed in 1067 or 1068. His lands lay in Br, W, Ha, So, and possibly elsewhere (ASC, p. 489; PNDB, s.n. ; Morris, Sheriff, p. 37; NC, IV, 514; VCH, Br, I, 295, 337a, 346a). Signs CD, 824,825. Eadric, thegn. This is possibly the Eadric of Laxfidd who was a wealthy thegn of Nf and Sf (Feudal Documents, pp. xc-xcii; ASC, p. 426) . He might also be a wealthy Kentish thegn (ASC, p. 451). Signs HLC, pp. 247-8; CD, 813. Eadsige, archbishop of Canterbury 1038-,-50. Previously he was bishop at St. Martin's (1035-8). Signs CD, 768,774,775,784,787,788,791, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 770, 778, 792, 793, 796); 771, 772, 779, 785, 786, 794, Boo, 912, 916, 939. Eadweald, priest. The only priest with this name of whom I know was probably attached to Christ Church. He signs under Cnut CD, 745, 746, 751. Signs CD, 788; (767). Eadweard, king 1042-66. Signs CD, 768; 773, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781 , 783, 784, 787, 788, 791, 797, 805, 806, 807, 808,811,819,822,956, 1332, 1335; FASM II, Exeter xii; HLC, pp. 247-8, 300-2; CD (767, 7~9~ 770, 778, 792,793,796,798,
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
810,816,817,823,962); 771,772,779,785,786, Boo, Bar, Bog, 813,815,818,824, 825,912,916,939,g63,g64. Eadwig, thegn. This may be intended to be Eadwig cilt of He. Signs CD, 813. Eadwine, abbot of Westminster 104g---ca. 1070. Signs CD (810); 771, Bog, 824,825. Eadwine, earl of Mercia ca. 1065-71 (on the date see above s.n. ,Elfgar, earl). He was the son of Earl ,Elfgar and a brother of Morcar. His lands were chiefly in Wa, St, Sa, Y, and Wo. Signs CD (816); Bar, Bog, 824, 825, g64. Eadwine, thegn. It is difficult definitely to identify this man. He may have been the above Eadwine before he became earl, or a wealthy EA thegn (Nf, Sf). In the latter case, however, the date of the first charter would seem somewhat early (Feudal Documents, pp. cxiii-cxiv; ASW, pp. 119-200). There is a sheriff of an unknown county with this name and with possessions in O and Wa (Morris, Sheriff, p. 43), but this is probably the son of Burgrad (q.v.) and too young to sign these charters. Signs CD (769, 796). Eadwulf, thegn. I cannot identify this man, but men with this name held lands in Y, Nf, D, and Sf. He signs CD, 791, and may have been a Devon thegn. CD, 787, is a grant to an Eadwulfin Co (see also ladulf). Ealdred, archbishop of York 106o--g. He was previously bishop of Worcester (ca. 1046--62), administered Ramsbury from ca. 1055-8 after the resignation of Hercman, and also held the see of Hereford 1056--60 donec antistes constitueretur. Only on CD, 808, 819,822; (810, 816, 817, 823) does he sign as archbishop. Signs CD, 784, 791, 805, 806, 807, 808, 819, 822, 956; FASM, II, Exeter xii; HLC, pp. 247-8; CD (770, 792, 793, 798, 810, 816, 817, 823); 772, Boo, Bar, Bag, 813, 824, 825, 912, 916,939, g63, g64. Eamgeat, thegn. This is a Wo thegn (PNDB, s.n.). Signs HLC, pp. 247-8; CD (823). Eamwig, abbot of Peterborough 1042-52 (ASChr, E 1041, 1052). Signs CD, 797. Ecglaf, thegn. Unknown. He can hardly be the huscarl of this name, whom Freeman mentions, from the neighbourhood of Durham (NC, IV, 203). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (770); 772. Ecgwulf, thegn. There is an Ecgwulf in L (LD, p. 64, no. 29) who seems to be the only man with this name in DB. I doubt that he is the witness on these charters. Signs CD, 787, 791; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (770). Esbem, thegn. This is probably the brother of Ordgar and ,Elfgar (CD, 1334). Signs CD (767), 813. Esgar, thegn. This is King Edward's staller. He has been called sheriff of Mx (Morris, Sheriff, p. 37), but Dr. Harmer doubts that he was (Writs, p. 561). His lands lay in many counties (PNDB, s. Asgeirr). Signs CD, 806, 808 (regis dapifer), 811 (Feilitzen (PNDB, s. Asgeirr) says that this Esgar may be a So man and not the staller, but in TCPB (p. 80) he is identified with the staller), 822, 956; (810, 816, 823); 771, Bar, Bag, 813, 824,825,916. Everwacer, thegn. This man held lands in So and D (PNDB, s.n.; TCPB, p. 80). Signs CD, 811; (816). Freowine, thegn. Signs CD, 916. Giso, bishop of Wells 1061-88. Signs CD, 811,822; Bog, 813,824,825.
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Godmann, priest. This is the chaplain of King Edward and the father of Godric, abbot ofWinchcombe (Symeon of Durham, II, 171). He is probably the Godman presbyter who held lands in D (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 791; (767). Godric, abbot of Winchcombe 1054-ca. 1069. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8; CD (823) ; 785, Bo1. Godric, prior of Christchurch, Canterbury. Signs CD, 773. Godric, priest. This is likely a monk of Worcester. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8. Godric, deacon. This is likely a monk of Worcester. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8. Godric, thegn. This is probably Godric of Burham (K), a privileged landholder (PNDB, s.n.; ASC, p. 439). Signs CD, 773; (769). Godric, thegn. This is Godric, the son of Carl, another landholder in K (ASC, p. 398). Signs CD (769). Godric, thegn. This is Godric, the sheriff of Br (CD, 840,945; VCH, Br, I, 293-4, 331-4, 348--50; NC, IV, 22-24, 494-6). Signs CD, 781; FASM, II, Exeter xii. Godric, thegn. This is a lawman ofL (LD, pp. xxix, xxxii, and 3, no. 1). Signs CD, 808 (filius Eadgyfu), 956. Godric, thegn. This is probably Godricfinc who held 7 hides at Charlton, Wo (ASC, p. 461). Signs HLC, pp. 247-8. Godsunu, thegn. This name must be corrupt. Signs CD (767). Godwine, bishop at St. Martin's, Canterbury, ca. 104g-61. The date of his appointment is uncertain but he was probably made bishop when Siward resigned (ASChr, C 1048, D 1049; FlWig, 1049). His signature does not occur on the charters unless he is the Godwine meant on CD, 825. Godwine, bishop of Rochester 995-1046. There may possibly have been two incumbents of this see with this name in this period, but Knowles lists only one (The Monastic Order, p. 698). Signs CD, 773, 784; (769); 771. Godwine, abbot ofWinchcombe ca. 1042-53. Signs CD, 797; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD, 771,785,912,916,939. Godwine, earl of Wessex ca. 1018--53. Signs CD, 768, 773, 774, 775, 776, 78o, 781, 783, 784, 787, 788, 791, 797, 807, 1332, 1335; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 770, 778, 792, 793, 796); 771, 772, 779, 786, 794, Bo1, 912,916, 939· Godwine, priest. It is difficult to identify this man unless he be the above bishop at St. Martin's, whose appointment is sometimes dated 1050 or 1051 (BKN) . This would permit his signing the genuine charter. Signs CD, 791; (792,793); Boo. Godwine, deacon. This is likely a monk of Worcester. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8. Godwine, thegn. There was a sheriff of So by this name (CD, 834-6, 838) and he almost certainly is the witness on these charters. Signs CD, 787, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD, 813,916. Godwine, thegn. The Godwine praepositus civitatis Oxnafordi of CD, 950, .is likely the man who attests CD (793) as praepositus civitatis. Godwine, thegn. A Kentish thegn who probably witnessed CD (770) (CrawCol, p. 151). Grimcytel, bishop ofSelsey 1039-47. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 784; (767, 778); 771, 779.
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Tiu Witenagemot in tlu Reign of Edward the Confessor
Gyrth, earl of East Anglia 105 7-66. Signs CD, 81 1 ; HLC, pp. 300-2 ; CD (81 o, 816,817); 771, 8o1, 813, 815, 824, 825. Halcon, thegn. This will be a L thegn (LD, index s. Hacon). Signs CD, 819. Harold, earl of Wessex and later king. It is not definitely known when Harold became an earl, but judging from the charters, he signs as an earl for the first time in 1045. However, he is mentioned as earl in a will whose date is probably 1044 (ASW, XXXI and p. 192). Dr. Harmer has suggested that the conflicting dates for Harold's earldom are probably to be explained by differing dates for the beginning of the year. She dates his appointment 1044/5 (Writs, p. 563). He signs CD, 776 and 780, as minister, but 781 as dux. Signs CD, 776, 780, 781, 787, 791, 806, 808, 811, 819, 822, 956; FASM, II, Exeter xii; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (792, 793, 796, 810, 816, 817,823); 785, 786, Boo, 8o1, Bog, 813, 815, 824, 825,916,939, g63,g64. Heca, bishop ofSelsey 1047-57. He was a royal chaplain before his appointment (FlWig, 1047). Signs CD, 956; (792, 793). Herdingus, thegn. He was the son of Eadnotl staller (NC, IV, 515, ASC, p. 489) and held in So and Br. He signs only twice, once as pincema on the doubtful CD (816), and again as reginae pincema on the spurious CD, 813. Hereman, bishop ofRamsbury 1045-55. He resigned in the latter year but later became bishop of Ramsbury-Sherborne 1058---78, and transferred that see to Old Sarum in 1075 (Writs, p. 563-4). He was a royal chaplain (FlWig, 1045). Signs CD, 776, 78o, 781, 783, 784, 787, 791,811, 822, 956, 1335; (767, 792, 793, 796, 798,810,816); 786, Boo, 8o1, 813,824,825. Hugo (Hugelinus), thegn. He seems to have been King Edward's chamberlain, His lands lay in Hu, Br, 0, and Wa (VCH, Hu, I, 354a). Signs CD (810 (camerarius), 823); 771, Bog (cubicularius).
ladulf, thegn. There is an ladulf (or Eadwulf) in Y (DB, Y, 329) but I doubt that it is the present witness. It may be that the ladulf who witnesses these documents is the Eadwulfwho was prominent in the rising against Walcher of Durham in 1080 (NC, IV, 456--7). He may also have been some L thegn. Signs CD, 806, 808, 819. Ingold, thegn. Signs CD, 8o1. Leofcild, thegn. This may have been a sheriff of Essex (CD, 869, 870; Writs, pp. 564-5; ASW, p. 191). Signs CD, 788; (769). LeofnoJ. It is difficult to identify this man. Feilitzen suggests a Co thegn (PNDB, s.n.). Signs HLC, 300-2; CD (770). . Leofric, bishop of the united sees of Cornwall and Devon 1046--72. His episcopal seat was at Crediton until 1050, when for greater security he removed it to Exeter (Writs, p. 565). He was a royal chaplain (FlWig, 1046) and probably attests CD (767) as priest. FASM, II, Exeter xii, records the grant of Dawlish, D, made by the Confessor to him (cf. DB, D, 101b). He also signs CD, 784, 787, 811, 956; HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (792, 793, 796, 798, 81 o, 816, 817); 786, Boo, 801, 813, 824, 825,¢3. Leofric, abbot of Peterborough 1052-66. He was a nephew of Earl Leofric. He also held the abbeys of Burton, Coventry, Croyland, and Thorney. On his pluralism
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see Darlington, "Ecclesiastical Reform," p. 403. Signs CD, 956; 785, 813, 824, 825. Leofric, earl of Mercia 1023/32-57. On the date of his appointment see Writs, p. 565. Signs CD, 768, 773, 775, 776, 780, 781, 783, 784, 787, 788, 791, 797, 8o5, 807, 1332, 1335; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (769, 770, 778, 792, 793, 796,823); 771, 772, 779, 785, 786, 794, Boo, 818, 912, 916. Leofric, priest. Two priests of this name sign CD (767). One is probably the Leofric who became bishop of Exeter, but who the other is I do not know and the name may have been repeated in error. Leofric, thegn. There is a Leofric who is referred to as praepositus holding in Wo (PNDB, s.n.) who may be the same man as the one Kemble makes sheriff of that county (Saxons, II, 168). There is also a Leofric, brother of Leofnod and son of Osmund (CD, 950), who held in Bd, but the name is such a common one that identification is difficult (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD (767), 916. Leofsige, abbot of Ely. His dates are usually given as 1029-45, but Miss Robertson argues that this may be wrong and that he did not die until 1054 or 1055 (ASC, p. 467). Dr. Harmer, while rejecting Miss Robertson's actual arguments, agrees on other grounds in dating Leofsige's death in 1055 (Writs, p. 566). Signs CD, 774,775,956; (769,778); Boo, 8o1. There is a second abbot Leofsige signing with him on CD, 956, but I have no idea who this could be (cf. ASC, p. 467). Leofsige, thegn. It is difficult to say who this is. It might be homo Tosti comitis in Bd. Signs CD (778). Leofstan, abbot of Bury St. Edmunds 1044-65. Signs CD (810), 813. Another abbot of this name signs the latter and spurious charter, but no other is known. Leofweard, abbot of Muchelney, before and after the Conquest (ASC, p. 488; DB, So 91). Signs CD (816). Leofwine, bishop of Lichfield 1053-70 (Tait, "An Alleged Charter of William the Conqueror," pp. 155-8). He was previously abbot of Coventry. Signs CD, 956; (816, 823), 813, g64. Leofwine, earl. The date of his appointment and the territories embraced by his earldom are uncertain. Freeman argued that he was appointed ca. 1057 (NC, II, 382-3, 583-5). The earliest instance in which his signature as dux occurs, with the exception of the spurious CD, 771, is HLC, pp. 300-2 (1059). It cannot be asserted that wherever the signature Leofwine minister occurs it is that of the future earl, although it is possible that he was old enough to sign at the beginning of the reign of the Confessor. He held lands chiefly in K, Sx, So, D, Mx, Ha, and Bk. He was killed at Hastings 1066. Signs as minister or nobilis CD, 787; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767,769,792,793); Boo; as dux HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (810,816,817); 771, Bog, 813, 815, 824, 825, g63. Leofwine, thegn. The one who signs CD (962) is called.filius 1Estan, and is mentioned in DB as holding lands in Bk and Nt (PNDB, s.n.). This may be the man who signs HLC, pp. 300-2. If it is not, identification is difficult (see P NDB, s.n.; VCH, Bk, I, 275). Locre (Locar), thegn. There is only one man of this name in DB and he held lands in Nt (DB, Nt, 285). Signs CD, 819. Lyfing, bishop of Crediton and Cornwall 1027-46, of Worcester 1038--46. Signs
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The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Corifessor
CD, 768,774,775,776,780,781, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 76g, 770, 778); 771,772,779,912,916. Lyjing, priest. This is possibly the presbyter hoTTIQ Eddeue of Ht (DB, Ht, 137). Signs CD (792, 793) . Lyfing, thegn. He was the king's staller. Signs CD, 956; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767); 801, 813 (regis dapifer) . It is possible that the second genuine charter is not attested by the staller but by some thegn of the same name in Ha, W, or So (cf. ASC, p. 463, and PNDB, s.n.). M;ergeat, thegn. Probably intended to be the same individual as the only one with this name in DB. He held lands in Lei, Wa, and L. He was the father of JEthelric (PNDB, s.n.) . Signs CD, 912. M;erleswegen, thegn. This is the well-known sheriff of L, who had lands there and in GI, So, Y, and D (VCH, Y, II, 172). Signs CD, 806, 808. Manni (Wulfmrer), abbot of Evesham 1044-59. Signs CD, 797, 807, 956; 771, 912,916, 939· Manni, thegn. There is a Manni, father ofWulfsige, holding lands in Mx, and a Manni the Swarthy in Sf (PNDB, s.n.). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii. Morcar, earl of Northumbria 1065-71. His signature appears only twice (CD, 916 (min) and 825 (comes)), in both cases on spurious charters. Nefetofi, thegn. I am unable to identify this man. Probably the name is corrupt. Signs CD (792, 793); Boo. Nor/Jmann, thegn. There is a Norl'Jmann, sheriff of Nth (CD, 863,904; PNDB, s.n.; Morris, Sheriff, p. 35), but the name is common and it is difficult to say who signs the genuine charter. Signs HLC, pp. 247-8; CD (816). Odda, earl of Devon, Somerset, Dorset, and Cornwall 1051, and he may have been earl of Worcester and Gloucester after Godwin's return (ASC, pp. 456-8. VCH, Wo, I, 26o, says he belonged to the foreign party). He was a kinsman of King Edward (NC, II, 380). He died 1056. Signs most of these charters as minister, nobilis, or miles. He signs CD, 797, as monk, but as Miss Robertson has argued this may be the result of a scribal error, mon for min (ASC, p. 457). As dux he signs CD, 805; he also appears as such in CD, 8o4, and FAG, IV, 32. Signs CD, 768, 774,775,776,780,781,787,791,805, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 76g, 770, 778); 771, 779• Ordgar. On most of these charters the witness would seem to be the Ordgar Deuonensis of the spurious CD, 939: he was the brother of JElfgar (q.v.) and held in southwest England. He must have been an important royal thegn. CD, 1332, grants a D estate to Ordgar. There is an Ordgar, sheriff of C (Morris, Sheriff, p. 35), but I cannot connect him with these charters. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 783, 787, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 769, 770, 778); 771, 779, 939• Ordlaf, thegn. I am unable to find another example of this name in the reign of the Confessor, although it occurs in earlier times, e.g., Ordlaf the earl in 901 (GP, p. 395): CD, 901, must be addressed to this earl by Edward the Elder and not by the Confessor. Signs CD, 787. Ordric, abbot of Abingdon ca. 1052-66 (Chron Abingdon, I, 464, 482) . Signs CD, 822; (792,796,810,817); Boo, 813.
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters
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0rdwig, thegn. Miss Robertson identifies him as the man who held Acton Beauchamp of the church of Worcester (ASC, p. 459). Signs CD, 8o7, 823. 0rdwulf, thegn. The name occurs frequently in the D and So entries of DB (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 774, 775, 787,791; HLC, pp. 300-2; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD, 771, 779. 0sbeom, chaplain. The man meant is very likely the one who later became bishop of Exeter (1074-1103), and was an intimate of King Edward (GP, p. 201; VCH, Sr, I, 281). Signs CD, 815, 825. 0sbeom, thegn. This is probably the son of Richard Fitz Scrob. He held lands in He, Wo, and Sa (Writs, p. 569). Signs CD (778). Osbert, canon of St. Mary, Rouen. I have no information on this man, but he must have been the agent of his church in connection with the subject matter of the charter he signs, CD (8 IO). 0sgar, thegn. He may be Osgar de Bediford (DB, Bd, 218) or the reference may possibly be to Esgar staller (q.v.). Signs CD, 1335. 0sgod, thegn. This is probably the Osgod Clapa who was the king's staller and held land in the eastern counties. He was outlawed in 1046 (ASW, p. 196). Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 783, 1335; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 76g, 770, 778); 771, 772, 779. 0sgod, thegn. This is Osgod apud Heailea (Hagley, Wo ; PNDB, s. Asgautr) . Signs CD, 805,807; (823) . 0smzr, thegn. This is probably a D thegn (ASC, pp. 448-9) . Signs CD, 787, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (770). 0swulf, thegn. This is probably Oswulfjilius Frane tegnus regis E., who had lands in Ht and Bk (PNDB, s.n.) . Signs CD, 787 ; (778) . 0swulj, thegn. This is Oswulfjila, a thegn of E (ASW, p. 191). Signs CD, 787,
788.
·, .
0wine, thegn. This must be a thegn ofWo, but I have no information on him. Signs CD, 805; 912. 0wine, thegn. This individual may be, as Miss Robertson thinks (ASC, p. 468), a lawman of Lincoln. If that is so it is likely the Owine referred to in LD, p. 64, no. 29. Signs CD, 956. Peter, priest. This is probably the chaplain of the Confessor, and later of the Conqueror, who became bishop of Lichfield (1072-85). On him see VCH, Br, I, 300; VCH, So, I, 406, 471b, 522. Signs CD, 791 ; 813,815, 825. Ralph, earl of Hereford ca. 1050-7. He was a nephew of the Confessor and is said to have accompanied him to England. Signs CD, 791, 956; (792, 793, 796); 785, Boo. Ralph, thegn. He was the king's staller under Edward and possibly an earl under William, dying ca. 1070. His lands lay in Nf, Sf, Co, and L (ASC, pp. 463-4; White, Complete Peerage, IX, 568-71). Signs CD, 791 (minister), 808 (regis dapi,fer), 811 (minister), 822, 956 (both as staller); (810, 816, both as minister); 8o1, 813,824, 825,916. Regenbald, priest. He seems to have been the most important of the king's chaplains in the latter part of Edward's reign, and is often, after the Conquest, called Bil"
K
130
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
chancellor. Whether he had this title under the Confessor is a much debated question, for most of the documents in which he appears as such are either of doubtful authenticity (e.g., CD, 809, 813, 824, 825,891; ASC, CXVIII) or postConquest (DB, He, 180b). He held lands in He, Bk, Do, So, Br, and Wo. Signs CD, 791 (presbyter), (792, 793, 796 (all as presbyter), 810 (regis sigillarius)); Boo (presbyter), 815 (no title), 8o9, 813, 824, 825 (all as cancellarius). Robert, archbishop of Canterbury 1051-2. He was bishop of London 1044-51, and all the signatures below are from that period. He never signs as archbishop. Signs CD, 784,791; (792,793); 785, Boo. Robert fit;:, Wymarc, thegn. This is the well-known staller of King Edward (NC, II, 230; CD, 859; Feudal Documents, p. xcii). It cannot be proved that he was sheriff of E, as Freeman thought (NC, II, 230), but cf. Morris, Sheriff, p. 37 and the authorities there cited. He is likely the Rotbert and Rodbeard of CD, 811 (TCPB, p. 80) and 810. He held lands in E, Sf, W, So, He, Hu, Sa, Ht, and C. Signs CD, 811; (810, 816 (procur.)); 771, 809, 813 (regis consanguineus), 815 (staller), 824, 825,
916. Rodbeorht, priest. I do not know who this is, unless it be Bishop Robert of Hereford (1079-95). Signs CD (792,793,796); Boo, 825. Rymhtricus, thegn. The name must be corrupt; should possibly be Brihtric. Signs CD, 791. S.eweald, abbot of Bath ca. 1065-77 (RB, Lil, 98). Signs CD (816). Siferth, thegn. Abbot Brand had a kinsman of this name in Lincoln (LD, p. xliv, cf. p. xiii). Miss Robertson thinks he was a lawman of Lincoln (ASC, p. 468). Signs CD, 956. Sihtric, abbot of Tavistock 1046--82. Signs CD, 787; 813. Siric, thegn. This is possibly the L man mentioned in LD, p. 200, no. 5, and p. 201, nos. 12, 13. Miss Robertson thinks he was a lawman of Lincoln (ASC, p. 468). Signs CD, 956. Siweard, coadjutor bishop to Eadsige, archbishop of Canterbury, 1044~. He
was abbot of Abingdon and signs the first six charters as abbot, the next two as bishop, and the rest as archbishop. Signs CD, 773, 774, 775; (767, 769); 916; 784; (778); 776, 780, 781, 783, 1335. Siweard, bishop of Rochester, 1058-75. He was abbot of Chertsey (ca. 1042-58) before he became bishop (RB, Lil, 97-g8) and signs the first six charters as abbot. Signs CD, 776,780, 1332; (769,778); 779; (810); 824,825,963. Siweard, earl of Northumbria ca. 1033-55. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 784, 787, 791, 797, 956, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 770, 778, 792, 793, 796,962); 772, 779, 785, 794, Boo, 818,912,916,939. Siweard, thegn. This is probably the Siweard who held in Wo and He and was a kinsman of King Edward (VCH, Wo, I, 321a). Signs CD (823). Siweard, thegn. This may be the Siweard Beam who held in Br, Db, and elsewhere (PNDB, s. Sigeweard). Signs CD (816); 813, 824, 825. Spearhafoc, abbot of Abingdon 1048-50, and bishop-elect of London 1051. Signs CD (793). Stigand, archbishop of Canterbury 1052-70. He was previously bishop of Elmham (1044-7), and bishop of Winchester (1047-70). Signs CD, 773, 784, 787, 788
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters
131
(as priest), 791, 797, 806, 808, 811, 819, 956; HLC, pp. 300-2; (792, 793, 796, 798, 810, 816,817); 786, Boo, 8-01, 813,815, 824,825,912, g63, g64. Swegen, earl of Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Somersetshire, and Berkshire. He was the oldest son of Godwin, and seems to have been made earl as early as 1043. He was outlawed in 1049, returned to England in rn50, and shared the outlawry of his father in rn51. He died 1052 on his way home from a pilgrimage. I think the signature Swegen of CD (962) is his, prior to his appointment as earl. Signs CD, 768, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 784; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767,769,770,778,962); 771,779,912,916. Swegen, thegn. Signs CD, 815. Swithgar, notarius. His signature appears only on spurious charters. Signs CD, 8o9, 813, 824. Thored, thegn. This man is difficult to identify. I cannot think that he is the same man (or one of two) who signs Kentish charters under Cnut (ASC, pp. 41011). Feilitzen identifies him as the Thored to whom the doubtful CD (778) grants Ditchampton, W, and who is mentioned as a benefactor of St. Mary, Winchester, in DB, W, 68. But this does not tell us much about the thegn, if he is our man. Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780; (778); 771. Thurgisl. This is likely King Edward's thegn in Bd (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD (962). Thurgod, thegn. He is called lagen and seems to have been one of the lawmen ofL (LD, p. 95, no. 1; p. 96, no. 7; p. 97, no. 13; p. 99, no. 29; p. 187, no. 6; Steenstrup, Danelag, p. 197; ASC, p. 468). He held lands in Y, Nt, 0, and L. Signs CD, 956. Thuri, earl. The only earl with this name is the Duri comes who held under Hardecnut (NC, I, 347, II, 375-6), and who may possibly have lived until ca. 1044 (NC, II, 375-6). lf this is so, he could sign CD, g62 and, if my dating is correct, 797. These are the only two charters from the reign of the Confessor on which his name occurs. On his earlier signatures see Writs, p. 574. Thurkill, thegn. This is probably a thegn in Br (VCH, Br, I, 294, 351b). The name, however, is a common one, e.g., Turchillus uuit of He (PNDB, s. l>orkell; ASC, p. 400) and Turchil the Dane, "one of the leading thegns of the eastern Midlands" (VCH, Hu, I, 330). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 778). Thurstan, thegn. I do not know who this is unless it be the EA thegn whose bequests are contained in CD, 788, and ASW, XXXI. Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii. Toft, thegn. This is, I think, the Tofi who was at one time (from ca. rn61 until sometime after the Conquest) the sheriff of So (CD, 821,837,839; Writs, p. 575; Morris, Sheri.ff, p. 35). He is sometimes confused with Tofi the Proud, who, it cannot be denied, could have signed the second and third charters. I think this unlikely because of their provenance. On the two men see ASC, p. 400; ASW, p. 186; NC, I, 521-2. Signs CD, 791, 1332; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 778, 792, 816); Boo. Toki, thegn. It is difficult to identify this man. There is a large landowner of this name, the son of Outi, who held lands in Nth, Lei, Db, Nt, Y, and L. Steenstrup thinks he was a lawman (Danelag, p. 197; cf. LD, p. xxx). Then there is the well-known Toki, the father of Aki. The latter had trouble with Bishop Ealdred of Worcester (CD, 805; cf. CrawCol, p. 144; ASC, pp. 447-8). King Edward
132
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
had a huscarl of this name (DB, Mx, 129). It is not certain, however, that any of these men sign these charters (cf. PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 1332; (767). Tostig, earl of Northumbria 1055-65. He was outlawed in 1065 and died at Stamford Bridge in 1066. Signs as minister CD, 787, 791; FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767, 792, 793, 796); Boo; as dux CD, 806,808,811,822; HLC, pp. 300--2; CD (810, 816,817); 771, 785, 8o1, 813,815,818,916,963. Toti, thegn. I am unable to identify this man, unless he be Toti, the father of Azur, who held in Bk (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD (767). Ufa, thegn. I am unable to identify this man, but he may have been from E (cf. ASW, pp. 191-2). Signs CD, 788. Ulf, bishop of Dorchester ca. 104!r52. Signs CD (792, 793, 796); 794, Boo. Ulf, thegn. He is called "son ofTofi" and occurs frequently in LD (see pp. xiv, xli-xliv, lxxxviii, and the index s. Ulf, Tope sune; cf. also ASW, pp. 207--8). An Ulf was sheriff of Mx (CD, 843), and a portreeve of London (CD, 872; Round, Geoffrey de Mandeville, pp. 353-4). As far as I know none of the portreeves of London attest charters, but writs are addressed to them (see Kemble, Saxons, II, 174). The first is certainly our man. Signs CD, 806,819; 815. Ulf, thegn. He is called Ulf of Lincoln and is probably identical with UlfJenise, a very large landowner in the Danelaw. Steenstrup thinks he was a lawman (Danelag, p. 197), but this is not certain, although his importance cannot be denied (cf. LD, pp. xxxi, xxxvii, and the index s. Ulf, Fenisc of Ftinen). Signs CD, 8o6, 808. Ulfiytell, thegn. This is most likely the U. cild of C (ASW, XXXI, p. 194), or the U. who was sheriff of He (CD, 802), but there are many men with this name (PNDB, s. Ulfkell). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD (767); 916. Vikingr. This may be a landholder from Sf (DB, Sf, 375b, 376) or a lwmo comitis Haroldi of C (ASW, pp. 194-5). Again it may be neither of these men. Signs CD (816).
Wagen, thegn. This is probably the Wagen who held lands in Wo and was one of the men of Earl Leofric (ASC, p. 458; CrawCol, p. 144). He may be the same man as the Wagen who held Wooten Wawen (VCH, Wa, I, 284). Signs CD, 805; 939· Walter, bishop of Hereford 1061-79. He was a royal chaplain (GP, p. 300). Signs CD (816,823); 8o9, 813, 824, 825. Walter, no title but probably thegn. Signs CD, 815. Waltheof, earl of Northumbria 1065-75. He only held part of this earldom under the Confessor. Signs CD (810, 816). Wigot, thegn. This is a very wealthy landowner of Wallingford (Br) who had lands in Sx, Sr, Ha, Br, Ht, and Bk (PNDB, s. Vigot). He was a kinsman of King Edward (CD, 862; EHR, LI, 99). It is not at all certain that Wigot was sheriff of 0, as Freeman (NC, IV, 497) would make him, for the bulk of his land seems to have lain elsewhere. (PNDB, s. Vigot; NC, IV, 497--g; cf. EHR, XLVIII, 14, where Darlington writes: "In some instances magnates addressed by name are not known to have held land in the region concerned, and it is reasonable to regard them as royal officials." Darlington is speaking of post-Conquest times, but the same would apply to pre-Conquest England.) However, it does not seem
List of Witnesses Signing Royal and Private Charters
1 33
possible to arrive at a definite conclusion. In any case his signature occurs only on one doubtful charter and three spurious ones. Signs CD (816); 813, 824, 825. Wigot, thegn. He is called Wigot of Lincoln (see LD, p. 241, no. 16). Signs CD, 809, 819. Wihtsige, thegn. I do not know who this man is unless he be Wynsige (q.v.). Signs CD (793); Boo. William, bishop of London 1051-75. He was a royal chaplain (FlWig, 1051), and signs the first three charters as priest. Signs CD (792, 793); Boo; 8u, 956; (816, 817); 813, 815, 824,825,912, ¢3. Wistan, abbot of Gloucester. His dates are given as 1058--72 (Historia et cartularium monasterii Sancti Petri Gloucestriae, I, 9), but I am not certain that they are right. A Wistan sacerdos signs a Wo charter (HLC, pp. 247--8, which I have dated 1060). This may not be the same man. A Wistan monk signs CD, 797, 807. Wistan signs as abbot only the doubtful CD (823) and the spurious ¢4. Wulfbeald, thegn. Men with this name held lands in Sf and Sx. Signs CD (769). Wulfgar, thegn. This is probably Wulger zt Hiwerc of CD, 897, a So thegn (PNDB, s.n.). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii. Wulfmzr, thegn. This may be intended to be a Nf thegn. Freeman says he was a sheriff (NC, V, 543). Signs CD, 912. Wulfnoo, abbot of Westminster 1032-49. Signs CD, 773; 779. Wulfnoo, thegn. It is difficult to identify this man. Edward had a huscarl of this name (CD, 845) who is probably the same man as the king's thegn who held lands in Ha (DB, Ha, 53b, 54). In CD, 843, a Thurstan huscarl is calledpraeftctus palatinus in the Latin version of the writ. This may explain why Wulfnoil is called praeftctus in CD, 767. Signs HLC, pp. 300-2; CD (767, 770); 772. Wulfric, abbot of Ely 1045-65. Miss Robertson thinks Wulfric's appointment may be dated ten years too early (ASC, p. 467). He is said to have been a kinsman of Edward (NC, III, 68). Signs CD (817); 813. Wulfric, abbot of St. Augustine, Canterbury, 1045-61. Signs CD, 773; (810). Wulfric, thegn. This is probably intended to be Wulfric zt Wernzforda (Wamford, Ha) (PNDB, s.n.). Signs CD, 824, 825. Wulfsige, bishop of Lichfield 1039-53. Signs CD, 774, 775, 776, 780, 781, 797; (798); 771,785,912,916,939. Wulfsige, abbot ofChertsey. His dates are uncertain, but he signs between 1042 and 1045 (ASC, p. 418). Signs CD (767, 778). Wulfsige, thegn. This might be the Wulfsige pzs cynges gerefa of CD, 789 (ASC, p. 440), but nothing more is known of him. I suspect that our man is a So thegn of King Edward (PNDB, s.n.). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii. Wulfstan, bishop of Worcester 1062--1)5. Signs CD, 797, 807 (both as monk); HLC, pp. 247--8 (as sacerdos); (816,823); 771, 8o1, 8o9, 824, 825. Wulfstan, thegn. Signs CD, Boo. Wulfweald, abbot of Chertsey 1058--84. He was also abbot of Bath, where his dates would seem to be 1061--84 (cf. RB, LIi, 97--1)8). Signs CD (810); 771,824,825. Wulfweard. This unknown abbot appears in the genuine FASM, II, Exeter xii, on the doubtful CD (769, 778, 792, 793), and on the spurious CD, Boo.
134
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Co,ifessor
Wulfweard, thegn. This is likely Wulfweard the White who held lands in · K, Mx, Bk, 0, GI, W, Ha, So, Do, and possibly Br and L (ASC, pp. 462-3; PNDB, s.n.; VCH, Bk, I, 216--17). Signs FASM, II, Exeter xii; CD, 8o1, 825. Wulfwig, bishop of Dorchester 1053-67. Some years after the Conquest the episcopal seat of Dorchester was moved to Lincoln (NC, IV, 285). Davis confuses Wulfwig with Ulf the Norman, who was promoted to Dorchester in 1049 (Regesta, pp. xiii-xiv). Signs CD, 806, 808, 819; (816); 779, 8o1, 813, 818, 824, 825, g63 (cancellarius).
Wulfwig, monk of Worcester. Signs CD, 797; HLC, pp. 247--8 (sacerdos). Wynsige, thegn. He was the king's chamberlain (camerarius) (Larson, King's Household, p. 129; PNDB, s.n.). He held in Bd and Bk. He is usually called Wenesi. Signs CD (816 (cubicularius), 823). He may also sign CD (793); Boo. Tfingus, regis dapifer. This seems an error for Lyfing (q.v.). Signs CD, 813.
APPENDIX C
Number and Classification of Witnesses on the Charters I. Number and Classification of Witnesses on Genuine Charters: Title King Queen Queen Mother Archbishop Bishop Abbot Priest Dean Monk Earl Thegn · Reeve or sheriff Regis dapifer or staller
Consiliarius Total
Royal charters 18 7 3
28
66 163*
8 4 3 8 27 21 7 4 2
33 97 45 4 4
Private charters
184
15
6g
17 37 ..
I
2 2
7 234
62
446
146
* Or 168 if we count thegru designated by titles of royal officials. ** Or 45 if we count thegru designated by titles of royal officials.
136
The Witenagemot in the Reign
ef Edward the Co,ifessor
II. Number and Classification of Witnesses on Doubtful Charters: Title King Queen Queen Mother Archbishop Bishop Abbot Priest Chancellor Canon Earl Thegn Reeve or sheriff Camerarius &gis procurator aulae Pincema Cubicularius Total * Or
125
Royal charters II
Private charters 2
4 16 17 70 43 23
46 106*
3 5 3
10
155 4 20
II
I
4 2 171
24
342
37
if we count thegns designated by titles of royal officials.
Number and Classification of Witnesses on the Charters III. Number and Classification of Witnesses on Spurious Charters: Title King Queen Queen Mother Archbishop Bishop Abbot Priest Deacon Chancellor Notarius Chaplain Earl Thegn Reeve or sheriff Regis dapifer or staller Regina£ dapifer Camerarius Cubicularius Procurator aulae regis Regis pincerna Regis aulicus Regis palatinus Regis consanguineus Total • Or
119
Royal charters
15 9 3 28 98 67 6 5 3 5 68 102• 2 6
Private charters
4 2 27
213
6 8 12
6
26 14 5
4
I
2
190 430
19 51
if we count thegns designated by titles of royal officials.
1 37
APPENDIX D
List of Archbishops Attesting Charters Name and see .tElfric, York, 1023-51 Cynesige, York, 1051--6o Eadsige, Canterbury, 1038--50 Ealdred, York, 1060-9 (bishop of Worcester, 1046-62) Robert, Canterbury, 1051-2 (bishop of London, 1044-51) Siweard, coadjutor bishop at St. Martin's, Canterbury, 1044-8 (abbot of Abingdon) (as bishop) Stigand, Canterbury, 1052-70 (bishop of Elmham, 1044-7) } (bishop of Winchester, 1047-70) (as priest)
Number of attestations on charters Genuine Doubtful 13 4
4
9 3
8 none
7 4 4 none
2
2
5 3
2
I
6 5
4 3
APPENDIX E
List of Bishops Attesting Charters Name lElfweald, Sherbome, 1045/6-58 lElfweard, London, 1035-44 lElfwine, Winchester, 1032-47 lEthelma:r, Ehnham, 1047-70 lEthelric, Durham, 1042-56 lEthelric, Selsey, 1057-70 lEthelstan, Hereford, 1012-56 lEthelwine, Durham, 1056-71 Beorhtweald, Ramsbury, 1005-45 Beorhtwine, Sherborne, 1023-45 Duduc, Wells, 1033-60 Eadnotl, Dorchester, 1034-49 Giso, Wells, 1061--88 Godwine, St. Martin's, Canterbury, 104g--61 Godwine, Rochester, 995-1046 Grimcytel, Selsey, 1039-47 Heca, Selsey, 1047-57 H {Ramsbury, 1045-55, 1058-78} ereman, Sherborne. 1058-78 { Crediton, 1046-50 } Leofric, Cornwall, 1046-72 Exeter, 1050--72 Leofwine, Lichfield, 1053-70 Lyfin {Crediton and Cornwall, 1027-46} g, Worcester, 1038-46 Siweard, Rochester, 1058-75 (as abbot of Chertsey, ca. 1042-58) Ulf, Dorchester, 1049-52 Walter, Hereford, 1061-79 William, London, 1051-75 (as priest) Wulfsige, Lichfield, 1039-53 Wulfstan, Worcester, 1062--95 (as monk or priest) Wulfwig, Dorchester, 1053-67
Number of attestations on charters Genuine Doubtful Spurious• 2 4 4 12 4 X
8
2 3 X
5 5 14 7 2
3
2 7
I
4 4 X
2 2
11
7
5
8 2
8
4
3
2 3 2 2 2
I
2 6
I
2
3 3
• Where the individual attests some genuine or doubtful charters I have paid no attention to the number of his spurious attestations. Where the individual's name appears only on spurious charters I have indicated this by an "x."
APPENDIX F
List of Abbots Attesting Charters Name £lfric, Pershore, 1033-55 £lfsige, St. Benet of Holme, 1019-46 £lfstan, St. Augustine, Canterbury, 1023/7-46 £lfweard, Evesham, 1014-44 £lfwig, Bath, ca. 106o-5 £lfwig, New Minster, Winchester, 1063-6 £lfwine, Buckfast, ca. 1046 £lfwine, New Minster, Winchester, ca. 1032-57 £lfwine, Ramsey, 1043-79 £thelnol'J, Glastonbury, 1053-78 £thelsige, St. Augustine, Canterbury, 1061ca. 1070 £thelstan, Abingdon, 1044-8 £thelweard, Glastonbury, ob. 1053 £thelwig, Evesham, 1059-77 Baldwin, Bury St. Edmunds, 1065-98 Beorh~r, Croyland, 1018-48/53 Beorhtric, Malmesbury, ca. 1062-70 Brand, Peterborough, 1066---9 Eadmund, Pershore, ca. 106o-85 Eadwine, Westminster, 1049-70 Eamwig, Peterborough, 1042-52 Godric, Winchcombe, 1054-ca. 106g Godwine, Winchcombe, I 042-53 Leofric, Peterborough, 1052-66 Leofsige, Ely, 1029-? 1055 Leofsige, unknown Leofstan, Bury St. Edmunds, 1044-65 Leofweard, Muchelney, dates unknown but before and after the Conquest Manni, Evesham, 1044-59 Ordric, Abingdon, ? 1052-66 S1rweald, Bath, ? 1065-77 Sihtric, Tavistock, 1046-82 Siweard, Chertsey, ca. 1042--,58 Siweard, Abingdon, before 1044 Spearhafoc, Abingdon, 1048-50
Number of attestations on charters Genuine Doubtful Spurious• 2 2
4 2 X
3 9 3
2 2
4
7
5
3
2 X
X
I 2
3
2
3
4
3
2
3
• Where the individual attests some genuine or doubtful charters I have paid no attention to the number of his spurious attestations. Where the individual's name appears only on spurious charters I have indicated this by an "x."
List of Abbots Attesting Charters Appendix F-continued
Name Wistan, Gloucester, ? rn58-72 Wulfnotl, Westminster, rn32-49 Wulfric, Ely,? rn55-65 Wulfric, St. Augustine, Canterbury, 1045-61 Wulfsige, Chertsey, ca. 1042-5 Wulfweald {Bath, 1061-84 } ' Chertsey, ca. rn58-84 Wulfweard, unknown
Genuine
Attestations Doubtful
I 2
4
Spurious
APPENDIX G
Abbeys Whose Abbots Attest Charters Name Abingdon (Br) Bath (So}** Buckfast (D) Bury St. Edmunds (Sf}** Chertsey (Sr) Croyland (L) Ely (C) Evesham (Wo) Glastonbury (So) Gloucester (GI}** Malmesbury (W) • • Muchelney (So}** Pershore (Wo) Peterborough (Nth) Ramsey (Hu) St. Augustine, Canterbury (K) St. Benet of Holme (Nf) Tavistock (D) Westminster (Mx) Winchcombe (GI) New Minster, Winchester (Ha)
Value of lwldings in DB• £ s. d.
462 81 17 639 198 52 768 129 827 99 178 54 81 323 358 635 96 78 583 82 39°
3
13 8 18 14 6 17 2 18
3 6 4 4 0
0
3 3 8
0
0
IO 16 15
0 0 0
0
8
5
0
0
0
5 4 IO
0
II 0
0
4
0
2
• The calculation is that of Professor Knowles (The Monastic Order, pp. 702-3) . •• Occurs only on doubtful charters.
APPENDIX H
List of Earls Attesting Charters Number of attestations on charters Genuine Doubtful Spurious• Name .iElfgar, 1051-? 1065 3 (as minister) Beom, 1045-g 3 Eadwine, ? 1065-71 Godwine, 101~53 17 7 2 Gyrth, 1057-66 3 II Harold, 1045-66 7 2 (as minister) Leofric, 1023/32-57 17 7 I Leofwine, 1057-66 3 2 (as minister) 4 X Morcar, 1065-71 Odda, 1051-6 II (as minister) 4 2 Ralph, I 050-7 3 Siweard, I 033-55 13 7 Swegen, 1043-7 7 4 (as minister) Thuri, ob. ca. 1044 Tostig, 1055-65 5 3 (as minister) 3 4 2 Waltheof, 1065-75 • Where the individual attests some genuine or doubtful charters I have paid no attention to the number of his spurious attestations. Where the individual's name occurs only on spurious charters I have indicated this by an "x."
APPENDIX I
List of Lower Clergy Attesting Charters Name .iElfstan, monk, priest, and prior (1061), Worcester ,E thelwine, dean of Worcester Eadweald, priest, ? Christ Church Godmann, royal chaplain Godric, priest of Worcester Godric, prior of Christ Church Godric, deacon, Worcester Godwine, priest Godwine, deacon of Worcester Peter, royal chaplain, later bishop of Lichfield Regenbald, royal chaplain Stigand, priest, later archbishop of Canterbury Wistan, monk and priest, Worcester, later abbot of Gloucester Wulfstan, monk and priest, later bishop of Worcester Wulfwig, monk and priest, Worcester
Number of attestations on charters Genuine Doubtful 2 2
2
3
3 3 2
APPENDIX
J
List of Thegns Attesting Charters• Name ..£lfgar }Elfgar }Elfgeat iElfnol'I }Elfric }Elfric iElfstan iElfweald iElfweald }Elfweard }Elfweard }Elfwig }Elfwine }Elfwine iEstan iEthelfril'I iEthebruer }Ethelric iEthelric iEthelric Rufus iEthelsige }Ethelstan iEthelweard }Ethelwig iEthelwine iEthelwine }Ethelwine Agemund Askell Azur Azur Azur Beorhtric Beorhtric Beorhtwine Beorhtwine Bondi
Location of principal lands•• SW GI,Wo MxorSo L Sf So So, Do, Ha, Br, GI, Ht, Bel, W Wo Bk, Ht Wo So GI K Ha Bk Do, So D K Wo
Number of attestations on charters Genuine Doubtful 9 2
3
2 2
2
3 7
2 2
6
5
3 3
I
2
3
3 2
?
So L D Nf, Sf Wa Hu So L L Wo
2 2
2
3
Br K
I
w
GI, D, Do, Wo Wo Do Br, Bk, Bel, GI, 0, Nth, E
6
4
5
3
I
2
* Thegns whose names appear only on spurious charters are not listed here. •• In some cases the location is conjectural (see Appendix B, s.n.). B '133
3
I
L
2
146
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor Appendix ]-continued
Name Burgrarl Carl Ceolrruer Ceolric Ceolweald Cyneweard Cynesige Dodda Eabpisus Eadrruer Eadmrer Eadric Eadwine Eadwulf Eamgeat Ecglaf Ecgwulf Esbem Esgar Everwacer Godric Godric Godric Godric Godric Godsunu Godwine Godwine Godwine Hakon Herdingus Hugo Iadulf Leofcild Leofnoff Leofric Leofsige Leofwine Locre Lyfing Mrerleswegen Manni Nefetofi Norffmann
Location of lands Bd, Bk, Nth Sx, Sr, Ha, W, So Wo So Sf Br, Wo, E, GI, Wa So, Co Co ? K Ht, Mx, Bk, D, So, E Nf, Sf, or K Nf, Sf Y, Nf, D, Sf, Co Wo ? ? SW Sr, Ht, Bk, Wa, Mx, C, Sf, Nf, Br, 0, Nt, E So, D K Br L Wo K ? So 0 K L So, Br Hu, Br, 0, Wa LorY E Co WoorBd Bd Bk, Ht Nt Ha, W, So, He, Db, Bk, Ht, Y, K, Nth, La, E L, GI, So, Y, D Mx or Sf ? Nth
Attestations Genuine Doubtful 6
3
3 I
5
2
I
2
2
3
5
3
2
I
3
2
2
3
2 2
I 2
List of Thegns Attesting Charters
1 47
Appendix ]--continued
Name Ordgar Ordlaf Ordwig Ordwulf Osbeom Osgar Osgod Osgod Osmrer Osmund Oswulf Oswulf Owine Owine Ralph Robert fitz Wymarc Rymhtricus Siferth Siric Siweard Siweard Thored Thurgisl Thurgod Thurkill Thurstan Tofi Toki Toti Ufic Ulf Ulfjenisc Ulfcytell Vikingr Wagen Wigot of Wallingford Wigot of Lincoln Wihtsige Wulfbeald Wulfgar Wulfnol'! Wulfsige Wulfweard Wynsige
Location of lands D,So, W SW Wo So YorHe Bd EA Wo D ? Ht, Bk E Wo L Nf, Sf E, Sf, W, So, He, Hu, Sa, Ht, C ? L L Wo,He Br, Db, Wa
w
Bd L Br or He ? So Nth, Lei, Db, Nt, Y, L, Wo ? ? L L CorHe Sfor C Wo,Wa Bk, Sx, Sr, Ha, Ht, Bk L ? Sf, Sx So Ha So K, Mx, Bk, 0, GI, W, Ha, So, Do, Br, L Bd,Bk
Attestations Genuine Doubtful IO
4
I
6
9 2
4
3 I
2
5
2 2
4 2
3
4
I
2 2
2
2
2
APPENDIX K
Thegns Who Were or May Have Been Sheriffs .lElfgeat, Mx .lElfstan, Ht .lElfwig, GI .lEthelnoil, K .lEthelwine, Wa .lEthelwine, Hu Bondi, Bd
Godric, Br Godwine, So Leofcild, E Leofric, Wo Mrerleswegen, L Nortlmann, Nth Tofi, So
APPENDIX L
Scandinavian Names on the Charters (26 thegns, 6 earls, Agemund (Ogmundr), thegn Askell, thegn Azur (Osurr), thegn (three men) Beorn (Bjorn), earl Bondi (Bondi), thegn Carl (Karl), thegn Esgar (Asgeirr), thegn Grimcytel (Grimkell), bishop Gyrth (Gyr!'lr), earl Hakon, thegn Harold (Haraldr), earl and king Locre (Lokkr?), thegn Ma:rleswegen (Anglo-Scandinavian, Ma:rle-Sveinn), thegn Manni, abbot Manni, thegn
1
bishop,
1
abbot)
Nordmann (Nor!'lma!'lr, but possibly OE), thegn Odda (Oddi), earl Osgod (Asgautr), thegn (two men) Thored (P6r!'lr), thegn Thurgod (Porgautr), thegn Thuri (P6rir), earl Thurkil (porkell), thegn Thurstan (Porsteinn), thegn Tofi (T6vi), thegn Toki (Toki), thegn Tostig (Tosti), earl Ulf (Ulfr), thegn (two men) Ulfcytel (Ulfkell), thegn Wagen (Vagn), thegn Wigot (Vigot), thegn
APPENDIX M
The Authenticity of the Charters I. Royal Charters: CD, 767, w43. • Doubtful. The witnesses whose dates are known are compatible with the date given, but the witness list appears garbled. It begins with the king and queen followed by the two archbishops. Then come the signatures of two bishops, one earl, one priest, two thegns (ministri), one praefectus, six bishops, four abbots, one priest, two earls, three priests, five thegns (milites), one undesignated name, two thegns (ministri), two praefecti, four thegns (ministri), one praefectus, and seven thegns (ministri). Also some of the names occur twice (Alfgeat minister, £lfwig praefectus, Leofric presbyter), and while it is impossible to say with certainty that they have been repeated in error, the garbled appearance of the list points to that conclusion. I would, however, hesitate to brand the charter and witness list as out and out forgeries, for DB, 71b, shows Sevenhampton, W, to have been held by £lfstan. CD, 769, w42-4. Doubtful. The only name on the witness list which might cast doubt on its genuineness is that of an abbot Wulfweard. No abbot of this name is known from this period; there is an abbot Wulfweald of Chertsey but he does not seem to have become abbot until w58 (RB, LIi (1940), 97-g8). Abbot Wulfweard occurs also on CD, 778, 792, 793, and 800, all of which are not above suspicion. There must, however, have been an unknown abbot of this name, for it appears on the genuine FASM, II, Exeter, xii. The land Cliff, K, which CD (769) gives to an £t'Jelred is shown as held by an £lfric in DB, K, 9, but the latter may have been the son of the original grantee. The absence of any reference to the trimoda necessitas may be suspicious. CD, 770, w44. Doubtful. The charter bears this date, but this is not reconcilable with the signature ofEaldred who did not become bishop of Worcester until 1046. If the charter did not bear the date 1044 it might be assigned to 1046, as far as the witness list is concerned, but then the Indiction would be wrong. CD, 771, 1044. Spurious. The witness list is irreconcilable with any date. CD, 772, 1044. Spurious. Impossible are the names of bishops £lfweald of Sherborne and Ealdred of Worcester and that of abbot £thelwig of Evesham. CD, 774, w44. Genuine. Both this and CD, 775, refer to land given to Winchester and both estates are in DB, So, 87b, and 0, 155, reported to have been held by Stigand, who had presumably kept them after he became archbishop in 1052. The Conqueror had then restored them to the church. The only name that occasions difficulty is that of £lfgifu Emma who was despoiled by Edward in 1043. It is possible that a reconciliation took place between the king and his mother, for her name appears also on CD, 773, which seems to • The date is either the actual date of a genuine document or the purported date of doubtful or spurious document.
The Authenticity of the Charters be genuine and from about 1045. It is an argument against reconciliation that her name does not occur on a charter after 1045, but I think the reason for its absence is that she ceased to sign after Edward married Eadgyd. The case for reconciliation is further supported by the fact that a writ, addressed to Earl JE!fgar, who received his first earldom in 1051, grants JElfgifu land (CD, 876), which after her death passed to Bury St. Edmunds with the approval of the king (CD, 878). Both these writs are deemed authentic by Dr. Harmer (Writs, pp. 148--g). CD, 775, 1044. Genuine. A careless scribe has written dux for abbas after each of the six abbots whose names appear on this witness list. The occurrence of the name JE!fweard among those of the bishops and those of the abbots is not serious, for JElfweard who was bishop of London ( 1035-44) had previously been abbot of Evesham (from 1014), and did not relinquish this office when he became bishop. This, however, is the only instance in which he attests in both capacities. I am inclined to believe that CD, 774, 775, 776, and 780 are all genuine Winchester charters, and that a careless scribe has made mistakes in copying the first two. If forgeries, they are most skilfully done.
CD, 776, 1045. Genuine. CD, 778, 1045. Doubtful. The names of abbots JE!fwig and JEthelwig cause difficulty. It is, however, recorded in DB, W 68 that the land which this charter grants p6rdr was given to the church of Winchester by him. The two abbots may be unknown ones, who have not been traced elsewhere. CD, 779, 1045. Spurious. This is a Westminster forgery (ASC, p. 433; Encomium, p. 6o), but the witness list is so skilfully concocted that only the signature of }Elfgifu, who signs lElfgyfu imma, points to a forgery. CD, 780, 1045. Genuine. The witness list contains exactly the same names as CD,776. CD, 781, 1045. Genuine (cf. ASC, p. 463). CD, 783, 1046. Genuine.
CD, 784, 1046. Genuine, unless the signatures of Eadsige as archbishop and Siward as bishop arouse suspicion. The two similarly sign CD, 778, and Siward was bishop at St. Martin's. CD, 785, 1047. Spurious. The only date at which this could have been made is 1047, for bishops }Elfwine of Winchester ( 1032-47) and JEthelma::r of Elmham (1047-70) both sign. However, other witnesses are irreconcilable with this date, e.g., earls Tostig, Ralph, and JElfgar. The abbots Lyfing and Godric, designated as abbots of Coventry and Evesham respectively, are entirely mythical. The only abbots with these names from about this time are those of Peterborough (1052-66) and Winchcombe (1054--ca. 1069). CD, 786, 1049. Spurious. The witness list as it stands is compatible with the date but it is very short and contains no abbots or thegns.
CD, 787, 1049. Genuine. CD, 791, 1050. Genuine. Kemble marked this charter, which transfers the see of Crediton to Exeter, spurious, but there seem to be slight reasons to doubt its genuineness. The witnesses are entirely in accord with the date. I think the charter must at least be founded on genuine materials (cf. EHR, XI, 731).
152
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Coefessor
CD, 792, 1050. Doubtful. The only difficulty lies in the name of Ordric, abbot of Abingdon, who seems to have become abbot in 1052, when Rotholf died. Is it possible that Ordric was abbot of Abingdon in 1050 and that Rotholf only enjoyed the fruits of the abbey or that Ordric is an error for Spearhafoc whose name appears on the almost identical witness list of CD, 793? CD, 793, 1050. Doubtful. It must be said that these Abingdon charters, although having respectable witness lists, are somewhat suspicious. CD, 793, for example, purports to record the gift of Sandford, 0, to Earl Godwin. Yet in DB, 0, 156b, the earl is not mentioned in connection with the land. This may, however, not be serious. Its transference to the abbey is supposed to have taken place after the death of Godwin in 1054 when Harold gave it to the abbey (Chron Abingdon, I, 469). This transaction is recorded in CD, 800 (q.v.). CD, 794, 1044-50. Spurious. The Croyland forgery with a truncated witness list.
CD, 796, 1052. Doubtful. This, another Abingdon charter, does not strengthen one's faith in that abbey's documents. It purports to be made in 1052, an impossible date for the witness list. Archbishop Eadsige, who signs, died in 1050. Cynesige and Robert, who sign as priests, became archbishops in 1051 . The name of Abbot Ordric is, as noted above, difficult to reconcile with the date 1050 (supposing 1052 to be a scribal error). If an earlier witness list has been appended to this charter, as has been suggested (Chron Abingdon, II, 525), his name seems out of place. It may be noticed that DB, Br, 59 shows Chilton to have been held of Earl Harold TRE. CD, 797, lo44. Genuine. The date assigned to this charter by Kemble, 1052-3, is unacceptable, for Archbishop ,Elfric, who signs it, died in 1051. The date would seem to be fixed by the signatures of Earl Thuri, who may have lived as late as 1044 (NC, II, 375-6), and of Manni who was appointed to Evesham in that year. As Miss Robertson has argued (ASC, p. 457), the designation of Odda and ,Elfric as monks is probably a scribal error. CD, 798, 1053. Doubtful. This charter is witnessed by the king and five bishops, one of whom is Stigand who became archbishop in 1052. The charter grants Barkley, Ha, to "meo fideli ministro ... Lutrise." Kemble thinks the name may be Leofric, but it might be anything. The land is shown in DB, Ha, 44 in the possession of ,Elfsige presbyter both at the time of the survey and TRE. Lutrise may be an error for ,Elfsige, but why is he then called minister and not presbyter or did he later become a priest? Or was ,Elfsige the son of Lutrise? DB says he holds of the king and held of Edward and the charter grants the land freely. It is among the lands listed in DB as held by the Canons of Holy Trinity, Twineham. The date and the lndiction do not agree.
CD, 800, 1054. Spurious. This charter from Abingdon purports to record the gift of Sandford to the abbey, but the witness list is incompatible with the date given in the charter. Were the list genuine (and it may well be that a list from an earlier charter was appended to this one) its date would be fixed by the signature of Ulf, who became bishop of Dorchester in 1049, and that of Archbishop Eadsige who died in 1050. The only names not entirely reconcilable with this date are two. Leofsige, abbot of Ely, is usually said to have died in 1045, but Miss Robertson has convincingly argued that he lived another ten years (ASC, p. 467) . The other name is that of Abbot Ordric.
The Authenticity of the Charters
1 53
CD, 801, 1055. Spurious. This is indicated by the attestations of such men as Archbishop Ealdred, Bishop Wulfstan, and the earls Gyrth and Eadwine. Yet it cannot be later than 1055, for Leofsige of Ely signs. The charter is an Evesham fabrication. CD, 806, !055-60. Genuine. Kemble dated this charter I051-60 but it must have been made after the appointment of Tostig as earl and before the death of Archbishop Cynesige. DB, L, 345b, shows the land, Walcott, in the hands of the abbey of Peterborough (cf. also Peter Chron, p. 41). CD, 808, I06o. Genuine (cf. DB, L, 345b; Peter Chron, p. 40). CD, 809, I06o. Spurious. The date cannot be accepted nor are the witnesses reconcilable with any date, for they include the attestations of both Earl Leofric (ob. !057) and Abbot Baldwin of Bury St. Edmunds who was not appointed until I065. CD, 810, I061. Doubtful. If this charter is not genuine I am inclined to think that it is at least based on genuine materials. DB, D, 104 shows the land, Ottery, in the possession of St. Mary, Rouen, and declares that it also held this land TRE. The only name on the witness list not compatible with the date is that of Earl Waltheof. It is not impossible that this charter was made some time after the bequest. It is written in the past tense and ends: "Hie sunt designata nomina testium qui fuerunt in praesentia quando exhibui praefatae donationis cartulam." It could thus have been made in I065, about which time Waltheofis thought to have received an earldom, ifit be granted that Earl .£lfgar may have lived until !065. The year of his death is not known but often given as I062. CD, 811, 1061. Genuine. In spite of Giso's alleged statement before the witness list I believe this charter to be almost certainly genuine and in any case based on genuine materials (see CD, 821, and DB, So, 8gb). CD, 813, I062. Spurious. This is a most interesting witness list and, if genuine, would give the most complete picture we have of royal household officers in the last days of Anglo-Saxon England, but unfortunately the designations are very likely, as Dr. Hanner has suggested, additions from the Norman period (BJRL, XX.II, 342; cf. Goebel, Felony and Misdemeanor, p. 362). The list may have been based on a genuine list but as it stands it has some inadmissible names. .£lfweald, bishop of Sherborne, died in 1058. I know of no .£lfric bishop at this time. Two abbots by the name of Leofstan attest but I know of only one from this period, that of Bury St. Edmunds (!044-65). The names of several of the thegns do not admit of identification and seem to be fabricated. CD, 815, I065. Spurious. The charter purports to be made at Winchester on the Feast of St. Sylvester (Dec. 31) at the time when the Confessor lay at death's door. The witness list, not quite compatible with the date, is an unusual one, and Harold is styled "dei gratia dux." Tostig evidently returned from exile to sign it. On another copy, dated I062, and also spurious, see Vita Wulfstani, p. xxvi. CD, 816, • !065. Doubtful. Kemble marked this charter spurious. It purports to • The witness list to this charter is omitted by Kemble, but is printed in The Calendar of the Manuscripts of the Dean and Chapter at Wells (Hist. MSS. Comm., London, 1907), I, 428--g.
154
CD,
CD, CD, CD, CD,
CD,
CD,
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor be written by Giso at the king's command on May 4, 1065, at Windsor. Yet it states that two years ago (Cal. Mss. Dean and Chapter of Wells, I, 428, says three years) the king sent Giso to Rome where he was consecrated by Pope Nicholas (1059-61), whereas Giso went to Rome in 1061 (NC, II, 302). The list of lands also looks suspicious. Yet the witness list is in every way compatible with the date of the charter. The titles used to designate some of the thegns have a Norman look, but the scribe may well have had a genuine list in front of him and added the designations. I would hesitate both to reject it entirely and also to accept it without question. 817, 1065. Doubtful. This, like CD, 816, is a charter confirming the rights of an abbey (this time Malmesbury) to a long list of lands. It is dated 1065 and purports to have been made by the Abbot Beorhtric. The witness list is unimpeachable as far as agreement with the date is concerned but it is not witnessed by any thegns. I doubt its authenticity. The date and the Indiction do not agree. 819, w6o-6. Genuine (cf. DB, L, 345b, 346; Peter Chron, p. 71). 824, w65. Spurious. The Westminster forgery dated on the Feast of the Holy Innocents, w65. 825, 1065. Spurious. A second Westminster forgery bearing the same date as the other one. 912, 1042-6. Spurious. The witness list contains the names of Bishop Lyfing and also Bishop Ealdred who succeeded him at Worcester. Again, the name of Bishop William of London is not reconcilable with the names of several other witnesses, e.g. those of the earls Swegen and Beorn. 914, 1042-66. Although this charter is witnessed I do not use it. It purports to be a grant to St. Michael of Rouen and is witnessed by eight men who all seem to be foreigners. St. Michael is not mentioned in DB as holding the land named in this document, which certainly does not stem from the witan of England. 916, 1043. Spurious. The charter speaks of Pope Alexander II (1061-73). The witness list is incompatible with this or any other date. Eadgytl signs as queen; Ealdred, who was not made bishop until 1046, signs as such; Tostig signs as earl. (On the charter see Tait, "An Alleged Charter of William the Conqueror," p. 162.)
CD, 1332, 1042. Genuine. CD, 1335, 1046. Genuine. FASM, II, Exeter xii, w44. Genuine. HLC, pp. 300-2, 1059. Genuine. Too little is known of the exact date of the death of Bishop £lfweald of Sherborne (usually given as w58) for me to brand the list spurious because his name appears on it.
II. Private Charters: CD, 768, 1043-4. Genuine (cf. ASC, p. 433). CD, 773, 1045. Genuine. A late endorsement dates this document w44. The only name causing difficulty, if this is the true date, is that of Abbot Wulfric of St. Augustine (1045-61, cf. ASC, 436--7). It is likely, however, that the true
The Authenticiry of the Charters
1 55
date of the charter is 1045 (cf. ASC, 436, and Encomium, p. xlix). Dr. Hanner dates it between December 26, 1045, and 1047 (Writs, p. 547). CD, 788, 1042-3. Genuine. The dorsal note has the date 1049 which is impossible. Alistair Campbell (Encomium, p. xlix) would date it 1043-4 during the period of Stigand's deposition from Elmham. I would date it a year earlier. Stigand signs as priest, so the charter was probably made before his elevation to the bishopric (cf. ASW, XXX and p. 189). CD, 805, 1051-6. Genuine. The date is fixed by the signatures of Earl 1Elfgar, whose earliest appointment to an earldom was about 1051 (ASChr, E 1048), and of Earl Odda, who died in 1056. CD, 807, 1051-3. Genuine. The date is fixed by the signature of Archbishop Cynesige (1051--60) and that of Earl Godwin, who died in 1053. CD, 818, 1042-66. Spurious. Both Siward and Tostig, who succeeded him, sign as earls. Also, it is impossible to reconcile the signature of Archbishop Ealdred with those of earls Leofric and Siward. CD, 822, 1061-5. Genuine. The date is determined by the signatures of Archbishop Ealdred, Bishop Giso, and Abbot 1Ethelsige, all of whom received their offices in 1061, and that of Earl Tostig who was outlawed in 1065 (cf. ASC, pp. 46~70). CD, 823, 1062-5. Doubtful. The name of Earl Leofric is not reconcilable with those of other witnesses. DB does not show this land in the possession of St. Mary at Worcester. The witness list ends "cum licentia Eaduuardi regis et Haroldi duds." CD, 923, 1051-2. Genuine. This, however, does not seem to have been made in the presence of the king. Only two abbots, both from Wo, and one earl, Leofric, attest along with fifteen thegns. CD, 939, 1046--50. Spurious. The witness list is compatible with this date, but the body of the charter mentions Pope Alexander II (1061-73) and has other marks of spuriousness (cf. Tait, "An Alleged Charter of William the Conqueror," p. 164). CD, 956, 1053-5. Genuine. The date is fixed by the signature of Bishop Leofwine, who was appointed to Lichfield in 1053, and that of Earl Siward, who died in 1055 (cf. ASC, 465-8, and F. E. Harmer, "Chipping and Market: A Lexicographical Investigation," pp. 358-60). CD, 962, 1042-3. Doubtful. Although doubt has been cast on this charter by Miss Robertson (ASC, p. 417), I do not feel it possible to brand it spurious. It is true that the signature /Elfgyfu imma is suspicious, but this may here stem from a scribe copying an original which need not have contained the "imma." Campbell says it is probably a forgery (Encomium, p. 55). Of the lands mentioned in the document I have been able to identify only one, Abbots Langley, Ht, and this is shown in the possession of St. Albans in DB, Ht, 135b. The date of the charter is fixed by the signature of Swegen as a thegn. He received his earldom in 1043. CD, 963, 1042-66. Spurious. It is impossible to reconcile the signature of Abbot Brand, who was appointed to Peterborough in 1066, with those of earls 1Elfgar and Tostig. No thegns sign. DB does not show the land Daylesford, Wo, in the possession of Evesham.
156
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
CD, 964, 1042-66. Spurious. Evidently another Evesham fabrication. Both JElfgar and his son sign as earls. It is not known that Eadwine held an earldom before the death of his father. The•signature of Beorhtric, abbot of Malmesbury, also causes difficulty. The date of his appointment is usually given as 1063 but it may have been in 1062, for William of Malmesbury in reporting it says he held office for seven years before being removed by the Conqueror in, it would seem, 1070. DB does not show the land, Little Dorsington, Wo, in the possession of Evesham. HLC, pp. 247-8, 1060. Genuine. The charter's date, 1058, cannot be accepted. The true date is fixed by the signature of Ealdred, who became archbishop in 106o, but signs here as bishop, and that of Abbot Eadmund, who was appointed to Pershore in 106o.
APPENDIX N
Suggested Provenance of the Genuine Charters Wiltshire
Winchester, Hampshire
Worcester
CD, 1332
CD, 768 774 775 776 780 781 783 1 335
CD, 797 805 807 HLC, pp. 247--8 pp. 300-2
Devon CD, 791
Cornwall CD, 787
Essex CD, 788
Kent CD, 773
Rutland CD, 784
Lincoln CD, 8o6 808 819 956
Somerset CD,811
FASM, II, Exeter xii
822
APPENDIX 0
Occasions on Which the Confessor Consulted or May Have Consulted His Witan Business
Autlwrities
1.
London
Date June g-10, 1042
Accession of Edward
2.
Winchester
April 3, 1043
Coronation of Edward
3. Gloucester
November 16, 1043
4. London
August 10, 1044
5. Sandwich 6.? 7. ?
1044 January 23, 1045 Spring 1045
8. Sandwich
Summer 1045
9•?
Christmas 1045
Despoiling of Emma and Stigand Appointment of Manni to Evesham; outlawry of Gunnhild (?) Gathering of the fleet ASChr, C 1044 Marriage of Edward Ibid. Appointment of Here- ASChr, C 1045, D man to Ramsbury 1046, E 1043 bis; FlWig, 1045 Gathering of the fleet ASChr, C 1045; FlWig, 1045 Appointment ofWulfric ASChr, E 1043 bis to St. Augustine's Appointment of Leofric ASChr, E 1044, D to Crediton and Eal1047; FlWig, 1046 dred to Worcester Outlawry of Osgod ASChr, C 1046, E Clapa 1044, D 1047; FlWig, 1046 Sveinn's request for aid; ASChr, D 1048, E appointment ofHeca 1045, C 1047; to Selsey FlWig, 1047 Appointment of Sti- ASChr, C 1047, D gand to Winchester 1048, E 1045; FlWig, 1047 Sveinn's request for aid; ASChr, D 1049, E appointment of 1046, FlWig, 1048 Spearhafoc to Abingdon Appointment of JEthel- FlWig, 1048 ric to Lindisfame (Durham) Baldwin's revolt and ASChr, C 1049, D the emperor's request 1050, E, 1046; for aid; mission of FlWig, 1049 Dudoc, Wulfric, and .£lfwine to Rheims
Place
10. ?
Easter 1046
11.?
Christmas 1046
12. ?
Spring or Summer 1047
13. ?
Autumn or Christmas 1047
14. ?
Summer 1048
15. ? 16. ?
Spring 1049
ASChr, C 1042, E, F 1041; Fl Wig, 1042 ASChr, C, D 1043; FlWig, 1043 ASChr, C, D 1043; FlWig, 1043 FlWig, 1044; ASChr, D 1045; Chron Evesham, p. 86
Occasions when Corifessor mqy have Consulted Witan Place 17. Sandwich
Date Summer 1049
Business Gathering of the fleet; return of Swegen
18. London
Midlent JOS0
19. ?
Autumn JOS0
Dismissal of nine ships; mission of Hercman and Ealdred to synod at Rome In-lawing of Swegen; report of bishops from Rome Transfer of Crediton to Exeter Appointment of Robert to Canterbury, of Spearhafoc to London, of Rotholf to Abingdon; heregeld abolished and all lithsmen dismissed Archbishop Robert's report on his return from Rome Visit of Eustace; proposal to punish men of Dover Affair of Eustace
20. Exeter 21. London
Midlent 1051
22. ?
Ca. June 30, 1051
23. Gloucester
August JOSI
24. Gloucester
September 8, 1051
25. London
September 21-22, JOSI
26. ?
Christmas (?) 1051
27. ?
Midlent 1052
28. London 29. London
30. Gloucester 31. Winchester
32. ?
Outlawry of Godwin; appointment of William to London and of Odda and ...£1fgar as earls Visit of Duke William
1 59
Authorities ASChr, C 1049, D 1050, E 1046 bis; FlWig, J049 ASChr, C 1049, E J047 ASChr, C 1047
J050, E
CD, 791 ASChr, C 1050, D 1052, E 104B; FlWig, 1050; Chron Abingdon I, 463 ASChr, E J048 ASChr, E J04B; GR, I, 241-2 ASChr, E J048, D 1052; FlWig, JOSI ASChr, E J048, D J052; FlWig, JOSI
ASChr, D J052; FlWig, 1051 ASChr, E J052
Dispatch of fleet to Sandwich September 14, 1052 Return of Godwin ASChr, F JOSI September 15, 1052 In-lawing of Godwin; ASChr, E J052, C out-lawing of FrenchJ052; FlWig, 1052 men; Stigand's appointment to Canterbury and Leofric's to Peterborough Christmas 1052 Welsh war ASChr, D J053; FlWig, 1053 Succession of Harold to ASChr, C, D, E 1053; Easter 1053 Godwin's earldom, FlWig, JOS3 and of ...£1fgar to Harold's Appointment of Leof- ASChr, C, D 1053; Christmas 1053 wine to Lichfield, of FlWig, 1053 ...£thelnoth to Glastonbury, and of Ealdred over Winchcombe
160
The Witenagemot in the Reign of Edward the Confessor
Business Aulhorities Expedition against ASChr, C, D 1054; Easter 1054 33. ? FlWig, 1054 Scots Mission of Ealdred to FlWig, 1054; ASChr, Summer 1054 34·? the emperor C, D 1054 Appointment of Tostig · ASChr, D, E 1055; Early in 1055 35. ? FlWig, 1055 as earl of Northumbria ASChr, C, D, E 1055; Outlawry of ..£1fgar 36. London March 20, 1055 FlWig, 1055 ASChr, C, D, E 1055; Welsh war Ca. October 31, 37. ? FlWig, 1055 1055 38. Gloucester November-Decem- In-lawing of ..£Ifgar; FlWig, 1055; ASChr, Hereman's request C, D 1055 ber 1055 for Malmesbury Appointment of Leof- ASChr, C 1056; Midlent 1056 39.? FlWig, 1056 gar to Hereford ASChr, C 1056; Welsh war Autumn 1056 40.? FlWig, 1056 Autumn or Christ- Appointment of ..£1fgar ASChr, D, E 1057; 41 . ? as earl of Mercia, and FlWig, 1057 mas 1057 of ..-Ethelric to Selsey Outlawry of ..£lfgar; ASChr, D 1058; 42. Gloucester April 23, 1058 FlWig, 1058; Chron consecration of ..-Ethelwig to EveEvesham, p . 88 (cf. EHR, XLVIII, sham 3) Appointment of Siward FlWig, 1058; ASChr, Summer 1058 43·? to Rochester, of D, E 1058 Wulfstan to St Peter's, Worcester, and of Hercman to Wilton Autumn or Christ- In-lawing of ..£1fgar FlWig, 1058; ASChr, 44· ? D 1058 mas 1058 Consecration of abbot Chron Evesham, pp. April 23, 1059 45· Gloucester ..-Ethelwig 87---SS Confirmation of Here- Stubbs and Haddan, 46. London Whitsuntide 1059 wald; visit of MalCouncils, I, 292 ; colm NC, II, 293. Consecration of Wal- De Inventione, chap.16 47. Waltham May 3, 106o tham Appointment of Eal- ASChr, D, E 1060; Christmas I o6o 48. ? dred to York, and of . FlWig, 1o6o Walter to Hereford Appointment of Giso to ASChr, E 1o61 Easter 1061 49.? Wells, and of ..-Ethelsige to St. Augustine's 50. Gloucester ( ?) Easter 1o62 Appointment of Wulf- FlWig, 1o62; Vita stan to Worcester Wuifstani, pp. 7475 September 1o62 Declaration of Ealdred FlWig, 1o62 51. ? that his consecration of Wulfstan set no precedent 52. Gloucester Christmas 1062 Welsh war FlWig, 1063 Place
Dau
Occasions when Coefessor may have Consulted Witan 53. ?
Date Ca. May 1o63
54•? 55. ?
Autumn 1o63 August 1065
56. Britford 57. London
Ca. October 25, 1065 Christmas 1065
58. London
January 6, 1066
Place
,1ss
161
Authorities FlWig, 1063; ASChr, D 1063 Welsh affairs ASChr, D 1063 Welsh war; appoint- ASChr, D 1065; FlWig, 1065; ment of Baldwin to Liebermann, GeBury St. Edmunds schichtsquellen, p.245 Northumbrian revolt ASChr, C 1065; Vita IEduuardi, p. 422 ASChr, C, D 1065; Hallowing of WestFlWig, 1065 minster Election of Harold ASChr, C, D 1065; FlWig, 1066 Business Welsh war
M
APPENDIX P
Classes of Witnesses on Royal Charters I. Classes of Witnesses on Royal Charters (Genuine): Date
Charter
King Queen Queen Mother Archbishop Bishop Abbot Earl Thegn Priest Dean Monk Reeve Regis dapifer Consiliarius No title* Total
1044 1044 1045 1045 1045 1046 1046 1049 1050 1044 1055-6o 106o 1061 106o-6 1042 CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD CD
774 775 776 780 781
I
I
I
I
2
2 10 6 4 10
IO
6 4
IO
783 784 787 79 1 797
l
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
2 9 5 4 9
2 9 5 4 9
2
2 2
2 13
2 2
5
l
I
l
806
I
808 811
I
I
819
1332
I
9 3 6 9
5 3 5 15
2 5 2 5 13 4
I
3 4 4
2 2
2
I
2
l
I
I
2 5
2
4 2 4 10
4 2 3 10
I
8
1059
2 2 2 2
300-2
l
I
2 5 5 4 35
2 3 2 5 9
60 l
l
2
34
31
31
31
IO
21
31
32
20
18 7 3 33 97 45 66 6 4 l
I
6**
34
Total
HLC, pp.
I I
2
1044
FASM, II, 1335 Exeter xii CD
I
I
l
I
1046
13
5 14
2 2 5
2 24
14
• All would appear to be thegns. •• Four of these appear to be monks, but two are almost certainly thegns.
22
IO
52
22
446
II. Classes of Witnesses on Royal Charters (Doubtful):
Date Charter
1043
CD
767 King Queen Queen Mother Archbishop Bishop Abbot Earl Thegn Priest Reeve Chancellor Canon Camerarius Regis procurator aulae Pincerna Cubicularius Total
I
1042-4
CD
769 I
1044
CD
770 I
1045
CD
778 I
1050
CD
792 I
1050
CD
1052
CD
793
796
I
I
1053
CD
798 I
I
CD
810
1o65
CD
816
1o65
Q
CD
~
817
2 7 7 3 21
2 4 4 15
2 8 8 5 15
I
I
I
9 3 5 6 8
9 3 5 8 6 2
4 3 5 4 4
I
5
41
26
40
34
35
I
I
II
I
I
I
4
~
2 4 6 6 5
2 9 3 6
2 3 6 4
17 70 43 46 106 23
i
II
3
I
23
6
~
I
II
I
I
I
I
I
I
4 2
4 2 49
Total
I
I
2 8 4 3 21 5 4
1o61
28
43
17
~
'->
~